6140 1 SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA 2 IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF SANTA BARBARA 3 SANTA MARIA BRANCH; COOK STREET DIVISION 4 DEPARTMENT SM-2 HON. RODNEY S. MELVILLE, JUDGE 5 6 7 THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ) 8 CALIFORNIA, ) 9 Plaintiff, ) 10 -vs- ) No. 1133603 11 MICHAEL JOE JACKSON, ) 12 Defendant. ) 13 14 15 16 17 REPORTER’S TRANSCRIPT OF PROCEEDINGS 18 19 WEDNESDAY, MAY 11, 2005 20 21 8:30 A.M. 22 23 (PAGES 9804 THROUGH 9881) 24 25 26 27 REPORTED MICHELE MATTSON McNEIL, RPR, CRR, CSR #3304 28 BY: Official Court Reporter 9804 1 APPEARANCES OF COUNSEL: 2 3 For Plaintiff: THOMAS W. SNEDDON, JR., 4 District Attorney -and- 5 RONALD J. ZONEN, Sr. Deputy District Attorney 6 -and- GORDON AUCHINCLOSS, 7 Sr. Deputy District Attorney 1112 Santa Barbara Street 8 Santa Barbara, California 93101 9 10 11 For Defendant: COLLINS, MESEREAU, REDDOCK & YU BY: THOMAS A. MESEREAU, JR., ESQ. 12 -and- SUSAN C. YU, ESQ. 13 1875 Century Park East, Suite 700 Los Angeles, California 90067 14 -and- 15 SANGER & SWYSEN 16 BY: ROBERT M. SANGER, ESQ. 233 East Carrillo Street, Suite C 17 Santa Barbara, California 93101 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 9805 1 I N D E X 2 3 Note: Mr. Sneddon is listed as “SN” on index. 4 Mr. Zonen is listed as “Z” on index. Mr. Auchincloss is listed as “A” on index. 5 Mr. Mesereau is listed as “M” on index. Ms. Yu is listed as “Y” on index. 6 Mr. Sanger is listed as “SA” on index. 7 8 9 DEFENDANT’S 10 WITNESSES DIRECT CROSS REDIRECT RECROSS 11 MARCUS, Joseph 9807-A 12 (Contd.) 13 9810-SA (Further) 14 CULKIN, 15 Macaulay 9813-M 9828-Z 9865-M 9876-Z 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 9806 1 Santa Maria, California 2 Wednesday, May 11, 2005 3 8:30 a.m. 4 5 THE COURT: Good morning, everyone. 6 THE JURY: (In unison) Good morning. 7 THE COURT: Counsel? You may proceed. 8 9 JOSEPH MARCUS 10 Having been previously sworn, resumed the 11 stand and testified further as follows: 12 13 RECROSS-EXAMINATION (Continued) 14 BY MR. AUCHINCLOSS: 15 Q. Good morning, Mr. Marcus. 16 A. Good morning. 17 Q. I just have a few more questions and we’ll 18 be done. 19 A. Okay. 20 Q. First of all, you mentioned in your 21 testimony yesterday that you were -- I believe you 22 were present when the Britto party was held at 23 Neverland; is that correct? 24 A. That’s correct. 25 Q. And do you recall which month that party 26 occurred? 27 A. I believe it was September. 28 Q. September of ‘03? 9807 1 A. I believe so. 2 Q. And do you know who was the organizer of 3 that party? 4 MR. SANGER: I’m going to object. That’s 5 beyond the scope of direct, and relevance. 6 THE COURT: Sustained. 7 Q. BY MR. AUCHINCLOSS: Mr. Marcus, you 8 mentioned that Mr. Salas called you on the night of 9 the 12th, or the early morning hours of the 12th, 10 when the Arvizos left Neverland; is that correct? 11 The 12th of February? 12 A. I believe so. 13 Q. Okay. Are you uncertain of that? 14 A. I’m uncertain of the date. He called me, 15 yes. 16 Q. Did Mr. Salas actually talk to you that 17 night? 18 A. I believe so. I believe he was at the front 19 gate and the officer actually dialed the number and 20 I believe Jesus got on the phone. 21 Q. So you actually had a phone conversation 22 that night with somebody from Neverland at 23 approximately one o’clock in the morning? 24 A. I thought it was later than one o’clock, but 25 I could be mistaken. 26 Q. Sometime in the early morning hours of that 27 morning? 28 A. I believe so. 9808 1 Q. Finally, during your interview with the 2 investigator when the warrant was served at 3 Neverland back in November of ‘03, at some point did 4 you ask the interviewer to turn the tape-recorder 5 off? 6 A. Yes. 7 Q. And that was right when you were being 8 questioned about children sleeping in Michael 9 Jackson’s room, wasn’t it? 10 A. Yes. 11 Q. And you never answered that question, did 12 you? 13 A. I believe I did. 14 Q. Well, wasn’t your next statement, “How many 15 more questions do we have?” after you said, “Could 16 you shut that off a minute?” 17 A. I believe I finished the interview as was 18 directed by the investigator. 19 Q. Okay. My question is, didn’t you say -- 20 after you asked the investigator to shut off the 21 recorder, wasn’t your next answer, “Okay. I” -- 22 “How many more questions do we have?” That’s the 23 question I’m asking. Did you say that? 24 A. I believe so. 25 Q. And then she said, “One,” and you said, 26 “Could we just move on to the next question?” Isn’t 27 that what you told the interviewer? 28 A. I believe there was a little bit more to the 9809 1 question, but, yes. 2 Q. Well, did you say something else? Is that 3 what you’re telling us, or is that an accurate 4 depiction of what was stated? 5 A. I believe you have it right in front of you, 6 if you would like to read it. 7 Q. My question is, is that -- is what I’ve just 8 read to you or what I’ve just told you consistent 9 with your recollections of the event? 10 A. Yes. 11 MR. SANGER: I’m going to object. It’s 12 asked and answered. 13 THE COURT: Overruled. The answer is in. 14 Next question. 15 MR. AUCHINCLOSS: Thank you. I have no 16 further questions. 17 THE WITNESS: Thank you. 18 THE COURT: Mr. Sanger? 19 MR. SANGER: Yes, thank you. 20 21 FURTHER REDIRECT EXAMINATION 22 BY MR. SANGER: 23 Q. Just very briefly on that. This interview 24 that you had with the police officers, did you 25 understand that that was voluntary, that you did not 26 have to talk to them if you didn’t want to? 27 MR. AUCHINCLOSS: Objection; relevancy. 28 THE COURT: Sustained. 9810 1 MR. SANGER: On relevancy? Okay. I’m 2 trying to understand. I apologize, Your Honor. Let 3 me think for a second. 4 Q. The interview we’re talking about is the 5 police officers at the ranch during the search, 6 correct? 7 A. Yes. 8 Q. What was your understanding of whether or 9 not you were required to submit to an interview? 10 MR. AUCHINCLOSS: Objection; relevancy. 11 THE COURT: I’ll allow the question. 12 You may answer. 13 THE WITNESS: I was trying to cooperate as 14 much as possible with the investigation on that day. 15 Q. BY MR. SANGER: Did you know whether or not 16 you had to talk? Do you know if you had an option 17 not to talk? 18 MR. AUCHINCLOSS: Same objection. 19 THE COURT: I’ll allow the question. 20 THE WITNESS: Yes. 21 Q. BY MR. SANGER: And did you agree to go 22 ahead and talk with them? 23 A. That is correct. 24 Q. And when you asked if they could turn off 25 the tape-recorder, did they accommodate you? Did 26 they turn it off? 27 A. No. 28 Q. You knew that they were continuing to record 9811 1 you; is that correct? 2 A. That’s correct. 3 Q. And you went on from that point. Do you 4 recall how long the interview lasted on tape after 5 that point in the conversation? 6 A. Probably five -- maybe five, ten more 7 minutes. 8 Q. And the officers continued to ask you 9 questions; is that right? 10 A. I believe one or two more questions. 11 Q. Okay. And you answered them? 12 A. Yes. 13 MR. SANGER: All right. Okay. I have no 14 further questions. 15 MR. AUCHINCLOSS: No further questions. 16 THE COURT: All right. Thank you. You may 17 step down. 18 THE WITNESS: Thank you. 19 THE COURT: Call your next witness. 20 MR. MESEREAU: Yes, Your Honor, the defense 21 will call Macaulay Culkin. 22 THE COURT: For counsel’s information, there 23 was a motion to limit filed by the defense on this 24 witness, and -- 25 MR. ZONEN: Your Honor, we’re not going to 26 be asking those questions. 27 THE COURT: All right. Thank you. 28 Come forward, please. When you get to the 9812 1 witness stand, please remain standing. 2 Face the clerk here and raise your right 3 hand. 4 5 MACAULAY CULKIN 6 Having been sworn, testified as follows: 7 8 THE WITNESS: I do. 9 THE CLERK: Please be seated. State and 10 spell your name for the record. 11 THE WITNESS: Macaulay Culkin. 12 M-a-c-a-u-l-a-y; C-u-l-k-i-n. 13 THE CLERK: Thank you. 14 15 DIRECT EXAMINATION 16 BY MR. MESEREAU: 17 Q. Good morning, Mr. Culkin. 18 A. Good morning. 19 Q. You are an actor from New York, right? 20 A. That is correct. 21 Q. Would you please summarize your career? 22 A. Summarize my career? 23 Q. Yes, please. 24 A. I started working at the age of four doing 25 stage and things like that. And done a number of 26 things; films, things like that. Kind of worked 27 till I was about 14, took a break there for a while, 28 and just started working again recently. 9813 1 Q. Do you know the fellow seated at counsel 2 table to my right? 3 A. Yes, I do. 4 Q. Who is that? 5 A. That’s Michael Jackson. 6 Q. Is he a friend of yours? 7 A. Yes, he is. 8 Q. How long has he been a friend of yours? 9 A. I first met him when I was nine or ten years 10 old. 11 Q. And how did you meet him? 12 A. He kind of called me out of the blue one 13 time, just said, “Hey,” you know, “This is Michael 14 Jackson.” And this is after the “Home Alone” movie 15 had come out. So it’s kind of like -- it was like, 16 “I think I understand kind of what’s happening, and 17 I’d like to get together and talk.” 18 Q. And he’s still your friend? 19 A. Yes, he is. 20 Q. When did you last talk to him? 21 A. I talked to him about three days ago. 22 Q. And at some point, did you visit Neverland 23 for the first time? 24 A. Yeah, it was after he had called that first 25 time. He invited us, me and my family, over there 26 to hang out. 27 Q. And did you and your family go to Neverland? 28 A. Yes, we did. 9814 1 Q. Did you hang out? 2 A. Yes, we did. 3 Q. How long did you hang out there with him? 4 A. I think the first trip we were there for 5 about three or four days. It was me and my younger 6 brother and my mother and my father. 7 Q. How many times do you think you visited 8 Neverland? 9 A. More than a dozen times from basically when 10 I was about 10 to when I was about 14 years old. 11 And I kind of took a break there for a while, just 12 didn’t go. I just never found myself on the West 13 Coast, so I never found myself going there. And 14 then went a couple times between when I was 17 and 15 now, just a handful of times. 16 Q. And when was the last time do you think you 17 visited Neverland? 18 A. About a year or so ago. 19 Q. Okay. And you maintained a friendship with 20 Mr. Jackson all those years? 21 A. Yes, I have. 22 Q. Okay. Do you consider him a close friend of 23 yours? 24 A. Yes. 25 Q. Let’s go to your first trip to Neverland, 26 okay? You say you were there with your family? 27 A. Uh-huh. 28 Q. And who in your family are you referring to? 9815 1 A. My brother Kieran and my mother and my 2 father. 3 Q. Okay. And what do you remember about your 4 first visit to Neverland? 5 A. It was big. It was -- it was -- I had never 6 seen anything like it before. Especially 7 considering it was someone’s house. It was -- you 8 know, it wasn’t exactly what I was expecting. 9 Because you’re nine or ten years old, you don’t 10 really pay attention to what people say or whatever, 11 you know, those kind of things. So -- you know, 12 everything is lit up. 13 And he was a nice guy. I remember he 14 laughed because I referred to all the Ninja Turtles 15 by their first names, and things like that. And so 16 it was one of those kind of things where it was just 17 very -- it was very casual, really. 18 Q. Did you and your family have a good time? 19 A. Yes. 20 Q. What are some of the things you did at 21 Neverland with your family? 22 A. Saw a movie in the movie theater. Rode on 23 the amusement park rides, and -- just everything, 24 you know. Just used the facilities, basically. 25 Q. How many times do you think your family has 26 been to Neverland? 27 A. About the same amount of times. When I was 28 younger they were there virtually every time I was 9816 1 there. 2 Q. And you have a sister? 3 A. Yes, I do. 4 Q. And did she visit? 5 A. I have two. 6 Q. Hmm? 7 A. I have two of them. 8 Q. Did they visit Neverland as well? 9 A. Yes, they have. 10 Q. How many times do you think they’ve been to 11 Neverland? 12 A. Not as often, just because they were really 13 never on the West Coast as often as I was. But 14 whenever they were in town and I was going, they 15 would love to go as well. 16 Q. Have you seen Michael Jackson outside of 17 Neverland? 18 A. Yes. 19 Q. Where have you seen him? 20 A. Whenever. I’d be staying at a hotel and 21 he’d come and pick me and my brothers up, and we’d 22 sneak into a movie theater like in the middle of the 23 night -- in the middle of, like, you know, a movie, 24 because that was the only way you could really see 25 an actual movie in an actual movie theater with him. 26 Just a number of occasions. 27 Q. Have you seen Michael in New York? 28 A. Yes, I have. 9817 1 Q. Okay. How many times, do you think? 2 A. Handful of times. Four times. Five times. 3 Something like that. 4 Q. How about in Los Angeles? 5 A. Yeah, in the City of Los Angeles, too. 6 Q. Other than Neverland, New York and Los 7 Angeles, have you seen Michael Jackson anywhere 8 else? 9 A. Yeah. He was in London when I was out there 10 doing a play. And he was out there for, I don’t 11 know, maybe a week or so. We hung out two times, 12 three times. 13 Q. Now, in London, what did you do with Michael 14 Jackson? 15 A. Hung out with his kids. We had -- we had a 16 dinner with a group of people, most of whom I had 17 not met before, but just -- it was a nice, casual, 18 sit-down dinner. And just saw the kids, things like 19 that. I always liked seeing the kids. 20 Q. And you’re talking about Michael’s kids? 21 A. Yes. 22 Q. And what have you done with Michael Jackson 23 in Los Angeles? 24 A. Same kind of thing. We used to hang out. 25 He had an apartment there that was actually in the 26 city, so we’d go visit there. Just kind of -- it 27 was a little more convenient, and it was smaller. 28 It wasn’t as, you know, far away. It wasn’t the 9818 1 daunting three-hour drive, you know. When you’re 2 ten years old, that’s an awfully long drive to get 3 out there. So sometimes when he was in the city, we 4 would just hang out at his apartment. 5 Q. Now, you’ve spoken to him on the phone 6 through the years, correct? 7 A. Yeah. 8 Q. How many times do you think you’ve spoken to 9 him on the phone? 10 A. I couldn’t really count. Couldn’t say. 11 Over 100 times probably. 12 Q. And have you called Michael Jackson 13 yourself? 14 A. Yeah. 15 Q. Has he called you? 16 A. Yeah. 17 Q. Has he called your family, to your 18 knowledge? 19 A. Yeah. 20 Q. And has your family called him? 21 A. Yes. 22 Q. You’re aware of the allegations in this 23 case, correct? 24 A. Uh-huh. Yes. 25 Q. You heard about some of the allegations 26 about whether or not Mr. Jackson improperly ever 27 touched you, right? 28 A. Yes. 9819 1 Q. Did Mr. Jackson ever molest you? 2 A. Never. 3 Q. Did Mr. Jackson ever improperly touch you? 4 A. Absolutely not. 5 Q. Has Mr. Jackson ever touched you in any 6 sexual type of way? 7 A. No. 8 Q. Has he ever touched you in any offensive 9 way? 10 A. No. 11 Q. What do you think of these allegations? 12 A. I think they’re absolutely ridiculous. 13 Q. When did you first learn that these 14 prosecutors were claiming that you were improperly 15 touched? 16 A. When did I first learn that? 17 Q. Yes. 18 A. I -- somebody called me up and said, “You 19 should probably check out CNN, because they’re 20 saying something about you.” 21 Q. And did you check it out? 22 A. Yes, I did. 23 Q. And what did you learn? 24 A. I learned that it was a former cook had done 25 something to me, and there was something about a 26 maid or something like that. It was just one of 27 those things where I just couldn’t believe it. I 28 couldn’t believe that, first of all, these people 9820 1 were saying these things or -- let alone that it was 2 out there and people were thinking that kind of 3 thing about me. 4 And at the same time it was amazing to me 5 that they -- that nobody approached me and even 6 asked me whether or not the allegations were true. 7 They kind of just were -- threw it out there just 8 like -- they didn’t even -- they didn’t even 9 double-check it basically. I mean, even if they 10 assumed that they knew the answer, what got me was 11 that they didn’t even ask. 12 Q. Now, are you saying these prosecutors never 13 tried to reach you to ask you your position on this? 14 A. No, they didn’t. 15 Q. Do you know if any police officer from Santa 16 Barbara has ever tried to call you to see what the 17 truth is? 18 A. No. 19 Q. Are you aware that they claim they are 20 going to prove that you were molested by Michael 21 Jackson? 22 A. Excuse me? 23 Q. Are you aware that they claim they can 24 prove -- 25 MR. ZONEN: I’ll object as leading, Your 26 Honor. 27 THE COURT: Sustained. 28 Q. BY MR. MESEREAU: Have you ever been to 9821 1 Michael Jackson’s bedroom? 2 A. Yes. 3 Q. And when did you first see Michael Jackson’s 4 bedroom? 5 A. I think it was probably the first trip. 6 Q. And did you go in there with your family? 7 A. Uh-huh. 8 Q. And what do you recall about Michael 9 Jackson’s room? 10 A. It was large. It was -- it was a very 11 comfortable place. He had paintings and all those 12 kind of things on the wall. It was -- you know, it 13 had two bedrooms and it was two stories high. It 14 was -- you know, it’s not what you normally 15 associate with a bedroom. 16 Q. And have you and your family stayed in that 17 room? 18 A. Yes. 19 Q. How many times, do you think? 20 A. Handful of times. 21 Q. How many times do you think you’ve stayed in 22 Michael’s room? 23 A. A handful of times. 24 Q. How about your sister? 25 A. Not as often. 26 Q. How about your brother? 27 A. Whenever I was there, my little brother was 28 kind of always tagging along with me, so he was 9822 1 usually anywhere I was. 2 Q. Where else at Neverland have you been with 3 Michael Jackson? 4 A. Everywhere, essentially. We were always 5 hanging out together, just like I said, and using 6 all the facilities; the zoo, the arcade, or the 7 movie theater, wherever. 8 Q. Have you spent a lot of time at Neverland 9 with Michael Jackson? 10 A. Yes. 11 Q. Have you played at Neverland with Michael 12 Jackson? 13 A. Yes. 14 Q. What have you done with him? 15 A. Like I said, we used everything. We’d play 16 video games. We would fill up a bunch of water 17 balloons and toss them around. Just things like 18 that. It was just good old fun, just like a bunch 19 of, like, kids basically having a good time. 20 Q. Have you been to the arcade with Michael 21 Jackson? 22 A. Yeah. 23 Q. Do you recall playing any games with Michael 24 Jackson in the arcade? 25 A. Yeah, sure. 26 Q. And do you recall this going on anytime of 27 day? 28 A. Playing video games? 9823 1 Q. Yeah. 2 A. Yeah. Absolutely. 3 Q. What time of day would you play video games 4 with Mr. Jackson? 5 A. Anytime. You know, sometimes -- I mean, 6 sometimes I fell asleep in the arcade and I’d wake 7 up and just start playing, you know. It was one of 8 those kind of things where, you know, you’d be up 9 half the night, you’d be -- you know, you’d be kind 10 of in and out of all these places. 11 So it was never really any kind of specific 12 time that we spent there, but it was, you know, kind 13 of just -- we were always kind of just either there, 14 or at the theater, or just driving around in the 15 golf carts, or something like that. 16 Q. Do you recall your family being with you in 17 the arcade? 18 A. Yes. 19 Q. Do you recall them being with you in the 20 zoo? 21 A. Yes. 22 Q. Do you recall your family being with you in 23 the theater? 24 A. Yeah. 25 Q. Did you ever have any reason to think your 26 family was being excluded by Mr. Jackson from 27 anything you did at Neverland? 28 A. Could you repeat that? 9824 1 Q. Sure. Did you ever get the feeling that 2 your family was being excluded from anything you did 3 at Neverland? 4 A. Absolutely not. 5 Q. Did you get the contrary feeling, that they 6 were always invited to be with you any time you were 7 there? 8 MR. ZONEN: Objection; leading. 9 THE COURT: Sustained. 10 Q. BY MR. MESEREAU: Did you ever think Mr. 11 Jackson was somehow trying to exclude your family 12 from his room? 13 MR. ZONEN: Objection; leading. 14 THE COURT: Overruled. 15 You may answer. 16 THE WITNESS: Could you repeat the question? 17 THE COURT: I’ll have it read back. 18 (Record read.) 19 THE WITNESS: Absolutely not. It was a real 20 open-door policy just with the entire ranch. 21 Q. BY MR. MESEREAU: Okay. That applied to 22 your family as well as you? 23 A. Yes, everyone. 24 Q. Okay. Have you ever traveled with Michael 25 Jackson? 26 A. Yes. 27 Q. Where did you travel to? 28 A. We took a trip, I was going with some family 9825 1 friends. We were going to Bermuda, and I said, 2 “We’re going.” And he said, “Is it all right if I 3 tag along?” And I said, “Yes.” So we did that. 4 After that, we ended up in -- we decided to 5 fly back to Orlando, because the family friends that 6 I was traveling with, that’s where they were from. 7 So we went there, went to Disney World for a day or 8 two, and ended up flying back with my family. 9 And I’ve also -- he was doing a charity 10 event a couple years back in Washington D.C., and so 11 I -- I hitched a ride with him on his plane back to 12 New York. 13 Q. And did Mr. Jackson ever do anything 14 improper to you on any of these trips? 15 A. No. 16 Q. Ever see him do anything that you found 17 disturbing on any of these trips? 18 A. Absolutely not. 19 Q. Has Mr. Jackson ever hugged you? 20 A. Sure. 21 Q. Have you ever hugged him? 22 A. Absolutely. 23 Q. Were you ever suspicious of any of these 24 hugs as being something sexual in nature? 25 A. No, it was always very casual. It was just 26 the way I hug any of my friends. 27 Q. Did you ever see Mr. Jackson hug your 28 sister? 9826 1 A. Sure. 2 Q. Were you ever suspicious of his hugging your 3 sister? 4 A. No. 5 Q. Ever see Mr. Jackson hug your brothers? 6 A. Yeah. 7 Q. Ever see them hug him? 8 A. Yes. 9 Q. Did you ever think anything suspicious was 10 going on when your brothers hugged Mr. Jackson? 11 A. No, it was always just how you kind of 12 greeted him, greeted almost anyone basically that 13 you were close with. 14 Q. Do you know someone named Wade Robson? 15 A. Yeah, I’ve met him. 16 Q. Where did you meet him? 17 A. When we were shooting the “Black and White” 18 video. He was one of the dancing kids. So I met 19 him and hung out with him after the shoot. 20 Q. Did you ever see Mr. Jackson do anything 21 improper with Wade Robson? 22 A. No. 23 Q. Have you been in contact with Wade Robson? 24 A. No, I haven’t. 25 Q. When’s the last time you think you talked to 26 him? 27 A. Was back then when we hung out, when I was 28 10 or 11 years old. 9827 1 Q. Do you know someone named Brett Barnes? 2 A. I think so. But I’m not really sure if I 3 do. I mean, I’ve heard the name before, and I’ve -- 4 I think it’s the same Brett that I know, but I 5 couldn’t be 100 percent. 6 Q. And if the person you think is Brett Barnes, 7 do you recall seeing him at Neverland? 8 A. If it -- yeah, if it’s the person I’m 9 thinking of, yeah. 10 Q. Did you ever see Mr. Jackson do anything 11 improper with him? 12 A. No, I’ve never seen him do anything improper 13 with anybody. 14 MR. MESEREAU: Okay. No further questions. 15 THE COURT: Cross-examine? 16 17 CROSS-EXAMINATION 18 BY MR. ZONEN: 19 Q. Mr. Culkin, good morning. 20 A. Good morning. 21 Q. Sir, isn’t it true that both in 1993 and in 22 2003 law enforcement attempted to gain access to you 23 to have an interview with you and on both occasions 24 your representatives refused to have -- allow you to 25 have an interview with law enforcement? Isn’t that 26 true? 27 A. Not to my knowledge. 28 Q. You’re not aware of any effort by law 9828 1 enforcement either in 1993 or currently within the 2 last couple years to be able to get an interview 3 with you? 4 A. Not that I know of, no. 5 Q. Isn’t it true that your attorney just within 6 the last couple weeks issued a notice that you would 7 not be giving any statements to either side prior to 8 your giving an inter -- prior to your testifying in 9 court? 10 A. Could you repeat that? 11 Q. Isn’t it true that just within the last 12 couple weeks your attorney notified us that you 13 would not be giving an interview to either side of 14 this case prior to your taking the witness stand 15 and testifying? 16 A. You’re -- can you repeat that one more time? 17 Q. Mr. Culkin, did you talk to anybody from the 18 defense prior to coming into court today? 19 A. Did I talk to anybody from the defense? 20 Q. That’s right. 21 A. I talked to Tom Sneddon yesterday. 22 Q. You talked to Tom Sneddon yesterday? 23 A. Sorry. Excuse me. Mr. Mesereau. 24 Q. You talked to Mr. Mesereau yesterday? 25 A. Yes. 26 MR. SNEDDON: I’m the one with the short 27 hair. 28 THE WITNESS: Yes, sorry about that. I went 9829 1 to his office yesterday for about a half an hour to 2 get my -- like, figure out where I was staying and 3 all that kind of stuff. 4 Q. BY MR. ZONEN: Did you give him an interview 5 at that time? 6 A. No, not really. He kind of walked me 7 through the procedure, what I would have to be going 8 through for the day. 9 Q. And did you talk to him about anything 10 substantive, any of the issues about your 11 association with Michael Jackson? 12 A. No, we didn’t. 13 Q. Were you aware that an attorney of yours had 14 contacted us and told us that you would not be 15 giving a statement to either side? Is that true? 16 A. I think so, yes. 17 Q. Was that your decision or your lawyer’s 18 decision? 19 A. I think I just took what he had to say and 20 agreed with it. 21 Q. So you decided all along you were not going 22 to talk to either side? 23 A. Essentially, yeah. I wasn’t really planning 24 on testifying. 25 Q. But you’re complaining that we didn’t 26 interview you? 27 A. I’m just saying it was something that -- I 28 said I kind of just -- all of a sudden I turn on the 9830 1 television or look on the Internet and there was 2 those things out there, and it was just surprising 3 to me. 4 Q. Mr. Culkin, are you completely unaware of 5 the fact that law enforcement has made a number of 6 efforts to gain access to you to talk to you? 7 A. Like I said, I’m unaware. 8 Q. No one among your representatives has ever 9 gone to you and said, “Law enforcement would like to 10 speak with you”? 11 A. Never. 12 Q. How old were you when you went to Bermuda? 13 A. I must have been around 11 years old. 14 Q. How long had you known Michael Jackson at 15 that time? 16 A. About a year or two. 17 Q. That trip was with the Goldstein family; is 18 that right? 19 A. That sounds right. 20 Q. That sounds right? You don’t recall? 21 A. It was 15 years ago. 22 Q. You don’t recall with whom you went to 23 Bermuda? 24 A. I remember it was my friend Brock and his 25 family. 26 Q. All right. And Brock’s last name is 27 Goldstein; is that correct? 28 A. That sounds right. Like I said, it was 15 9831 1 years ago. And it wasn’t -- I haven’t really talked 2 to them since then almost. 3 Q. And how is it that Mr. Jackson ended up 4 going to Bermuda with you? 5 A. I told him I was going, and he seemed 6 excited. And I said, “Would you like to come 7 along?” So he said, “Let’s go to Bermuda.” 8 Q. You’re an 11-year-old child, but you felt it 9 was okay to invite Mr. Jackson to attend a trip that 10 you were going on with another family? 11 A. Yeah. I mean, and they were fine with it, 12 from what I remember. 13 Q. Well, did you consult with them before you 14 invited Mr. Jackson to come along? 15 A. To be honest, I don’t remember. 16 Q. All right. The Goldsteins have a child who 17 at that time had appeared in a movie with you; is 18 that right? 19 A. I don’t remember him being in the film. He 20 lived in the same community as me when I was 21 shooting the film “My Girl.” And it was just kind 22 of a community like -- it was almost -- it wasn’t 23 exactly a gated community, but it was off of, like, 24 the Universal lot. And he was just a neighborhood 25 kid that I got friendly with. 26 Q. You became friendly with Brock during the 27 course of the filming of that film; is that right? 28 A. Yes. 9832 1 Q. And you used to spend time at their home? 2 A. Yes. 3 Q. And you would spend the night at their home 4 as well; is that correct? 5 A. Yeah. 6 Q. And when they were planning a trip to 7 Bermuda, they invited you to come along? 8 A. Yeah. 9 Q. They consulted with your parents in advance 10 and your parents agreed; is that true? 11 A. Yeah. 12 Q. All right. You then invited Mr. Jackson to 13 come along as well; is that correct? 14 A. From what I remember, yes. 15 Q. All right. You did not tell either Mr. or 16 Mrs. Goldstein that you had done that in advance of 17 that trip? 18 A. Like I said, I don’t remember that. 19 Q. Now, you invited Mr. Jackson or Mr. Jackson 20 invited himself? Which was it? 21 A. To be honest, I don’t remember. I do -- I 22 think it was something like, “I’m going to Bermuda.” 23 You know, “We’re going to have a good time.” I 24 don’t remember how exactly it went over, whether it 25 was, like, “Oh, is it all right if I come?” Or if 26 it was, “Why don’t you come along.” I honestly 27 don’t remember. 28 Q. Did Mr. Jackson travel with you to Bermuda 9833 1 or did he meet you there? 2 A. I honestly don’t remember. 3 Q. When he got there, he gave you a watch, did 4 he not? 5 A. I think that’s when he gave me the watch. 6 Q. It was a Rolex? 7 A. Yes. 8 Q. He gave a Rolex to an 11-year-old child? 9 A. Yeah. But it wasn’t -- it wasn’t anything 10 all that crazy to me. I didn’t see it as anything 11 like that. I was not a person without means, so it 12 wasn’t anything that was all that awe-inspiring. I 13 mean, my father had a Rolex. It was that kind of 14 thing. 15 Q. Did he give a Rolex to Brock as well? 16 A. I don’t remember. 17 Q. Did he give any gift to Brock? 18 A. I don’t remember. 19 Q. Isn’t it true that the Goldstein family, the 20 parents, Mr. and Mrs. Goldstein, felt excluded by 21 the presence of Mr. Jackson; that he was attempting 22 to and succeeded in taking you away from the family 23 in terms of the events that were being -- that they 24 were doing? 25 MR. MESEREAU: Objection; calls for 26 speculation. 27 MR. ZONEN: It’s exactly in response to the 28 question that counsel asked. 9834 1 THE COURT: You’re asking him for the 2 Goldsteins’ feelings. The objection is sustained. 3 Q. BY MR. ZONEN: Did they tell you that they 4 felt that they were being excluded from activities 5 with you? 6 A. Not that I remember. 7 Q. Did they complain to you at all about the 8 fact that Mr. Jackson was dominating your time? 9 A. I don’t -- not that I remember. 10 Q. Did Mr. Jackson suggest that you go with him 11 to different locations in Bermuda separate from the 12 Goldstein family? 13 A. Excuse me? 14 Q. Did Mr. Jackson suggest to you that you go 15 with him to locations in Bermuda without the 16 Goldstein family? 17 A. Not that I remember. Like I said, this 18 whole trip was 15 years ago. And I was nine or ten 19 years old. And if I knew I was going to have to be 20 testifying about it, I’m sure I would have made an 21 effort to remember. 22 Q. How old are you now? 23 A. I’m 24. 24 Q. You’re 24. And you’re saying it’s 15 years 25 ago? 26 A. 13, 14, 15 years ago. I honestly don’t 27 remember exactly how old I was. 28 Q. You were somewhere between nine and -- 9835 1 A. 11, yes. 2 Q. And you met him when you were nine? 3 A. I think that’s about right, yeah. So it 4 must have been when I was about 10 or 11. 5 Q. You had known him for at least a year at the 6 time you went on that trip? 7 A. Yeah, for at least a year. 8 Q. All right. And then the question about 9 whether you have a recollection about Mr. Jackson 10 asking you to go with him to locations without the 11 Goldstein family, at this time you do not recall the 12 answer to that question? 13 A. I don’t, no. 14 Q. Did Mrs. Goldstein at times tell you that it 15 was not okay for you to go away with Mr. Jackson by 16 yourself? 17 A. Could you repeat that? 18 Q. Didn’t Mrs. Goldstein tell you it was not 19 okay for you to go away with Mr. Jackson by yourself 20 without somebody from the Goldstein family being 21 there? Didn’t she tell you that? 22 A. Gosh, I don’t remember those kind of -- 23 those kind of details. I remember -- I could tell 24 you the hotel room, what it looked like. I could 25 tell you, you know, if it was on the beach, and 26 things like that. But I can’t tell you -- I don’t 27 remember a lot of these specific details, because 28 there just wasn’t anything that eventful going on, 9836 1 besides that. 2 Q. But you don’t remember her telling you 3 specifically that she was not going to allow you to 4 go places with Mr. Jackson by yourself unaccompanied 5 by another member of their family? 6 A. Not that I remember, but I don’t know. 7 Q. How long did you stay in Bermuda? 8 A. I don’t know. It could have been, like, 9 about a week or so. 10 Q. Did Mr. Jackson stay with you in Bermuda the 11 entire time? 12 A. From what I remember, he was there the whole 13 time. 14 Q. Was he there with any other adult 15 companionship? 16 A. How do you mean? 17 Q. Did he come with another person, man or 18 woman, a companion? 19 A. I don’t think so, no. I mean, he might have 20 had some security with him but I’m not sure. 21 Q. Other than security, did he come with a man 22 or woman with whom he intended to travel purely for 23 companionship? 24 A. No. 25 Q. Was it your belief that he was there to 26 visit with you? 27 A. Yeah, to visit, and spend some time in 28 Bermuda. 9837 1 Q. All right. And to spend a week or more with 2 a ten-year-old child? 3 A. To spend a week or more with me, yes. 4 Q. And had he ever done that prior to that 5 date, gone traveling with you? 6 A. Not that I remember, no. We never really -- 7 I mean, besides when he was in Los Angeles, and I 8 was, he’d come visit me. But we never really went 9 on, like, trips. 10 Q. Do you still have that Rolex watch? 11 A. I think I do have it somewhere, yes. 12 Q. You don’t wear it any longer? 13 A. It doesn’t fit. 14 Q. It’s a woman’s watch; is that correct? 15 A. Not that I know of. It was small. It was a 16 small watch, and the band is very small on it, so 17 like I said, it doesn’t really fit me anymore. 18 Q. Did Mr. or Mrs. Goldstein comment to you 19 about anything at the time that watch was given to 20 you? 21 A. Not that I remember. 22 Q. In your presence, did they tell Mr. Jackson 23 they thought that was an inappropriate gift? 24 MR. MESEREAU: Objection. Hearsay; calls 25 for speculation. 26 THE COURT: Sustained. 27 Q. BY MR. ZONEN: Had you taken any trips with 28 Mr. Jackson prior to the Bermuda trip? 9838 1 A. No, we never really took any, like, trips or 2 vacations, really. Like I said, it was something -- 3 when I was in Los Angeles we would hang out. Or if 4 he was in New York, we’d get together. 5 Q. Did you travel with Mr. Jackson anywhere 6 prior to the Bermuda trip where you stayed overnight 7 in a hotel with Mr. Jackson? 8 A. I don’t think so, no. 9 Q. Prior to the Bermuda trip, did you go 10 anywhere outside of California with Mr. Jackson? 11 A. Did we go anywhere outside of -- 12 Q. I asked you, did you go anywhere -- 13 A. I know -- 14 Q. Did you go anywhere with Mr. Jackson prior 15 to the Bermuda trip? 16 A. Could you repeat that again? 17 Q. Prior to the Bermuda trip, did you travel 18 anywhere with Mr. Jackson? 19 A. Not that I remember. Not like we would be 20 somewhere and then travel somewhere else, besides 21 being in Los Angeles or going to Neverland or when 22 he was in New York, that kind of thing. 23 Q. In Bermuda, did you change hotels because of 24 Mr. Jackson’s arrival? 25 A. I don’t remember, but probably, because we 26 were staying in a larger hotel with -- I think it 27 was just a larger hotel, kind of beyond the means of 28 what we were kind of expecting to stay in. 9839 1 Q. Prior to staying in Bermuda, had you ever 2 spent the night alone with Mr. Jackson? 3 A. How do you mean “spend the night”? 4 Q. Did you ever share a bed with Mr. Jackson 5 prior to going to Bermuda? 6 A. Yeah, I mean, I’d fallen asleep in the same 7 bed as him. 8 Q. Did you ever do that, fall asleep in the 9 same bed as Mr. Jackson prior to going to Bermuda 10 where none of your brothers or sisters were present? 11 A. It’s possible. But like I said, usually my 12 brother was tagging along with me. But I fell 13 asleep basically everywhere in that ranch, or 14 anywhere else when I was hanging out with him. I 15 would just flop down on the floor half the time. 16 Q. Mr. Culkin, the question was, did you ever 17 share a bed with Mr. Jackson -- 18 A. Yes. 19 Q. -- the two of you by yourself, prior to 20 going to Bermuda? 21 A. If I remember correctly, probably, yes. 22 Q. On approximately how many occasions did you 23 and Mr. Jackson share a bed the entire night prior 24 to going to Bermuda? 25 A. A handful of times. 26 Q. Was it your expectation that in Bermuda that 27 you would be sleeping with Mr. Jackson? 28 A. Excuse me? 9840 1 Q. Was it your expectation that while in 2 Bermuda you would be sharing a hotel room and a bed 3 with Mr. Jackson? 4 A. I don’t remember it being like an 5 expectation. It was -- I may have fallen asleep in 6 the same bed with him there, but it was just as 7 likely I’d fall asleep on the couch watching T.V. 8 Q. You might have fallen asleep in the bed with 9 Mr. Jackson in Bermuda? 10 A. I might have fallen asleep on his bed, yes. 11 Q. Now, prior to going to Bermuda, you said it 12 may have been a handful of times. What is a handful 13 of times? About five or six? 14 A. Yeah, like half dozen times. 15 Q. Half dozen times? 16 A. Ten at most. 17 Q. Ten at most? This is prior to going to 18 Bermuda. 19 A. Yeah, I’d known him for about a year, and 20 hung out, I’d been to his ranch about four or five 21 times, I think, within that year. 22 Q. So you think you might have shared his bed 23 with him six to ten times prior to going to Bermuda; 24 is that the case? 25 A. It’s possible. 26 Q. All right. On how many of those occasions 27 were you there by yourself without any sibling, 28 alone, without any sibling at all? 9841 1 A. I don’t really remember. But most every 2 time I was there, I was there with my siblings. And 3 most every time I was with my siblings, they were, 4 like, with me the entire time. 5 Q. All right. How many times do you think 6 prior to going to Bermuda did you share a bed with 7 Mr. Jackson by yourself? 8 A. I honestly don’t remember. I couldn’t say. 9 Q. How about either of your sisters? Did they 10 ever share a bed with Mr. Jackson by themselves? 11 A. Not that I know of, no. 12 Q. That never happened, did it? 13 A. Not that I know of. 14 Q. In fact, none of your brothers ever shared a 15 bed with Mr. Jackson by themselves either, did they? 16 A. I’m not sure if that’s true. But I don’t -- 17 I don’t know. Sometimes I would -- I wouldn’t fall 18 asleep. I’d be up for a little bit longer and, you 19 know, my brothers would fall asleep who knows where. 20 Q. But there were occasions when you went to 21 Neverland without your siblings and without your 22 parents; is that right? 23 A. I think I took one trip there where I 24 arrived there before my family did, for like a day 25 or two, and then they showed up. 26 Q. Up until the age of, say, 14, are you 27 telling us every time you went to Neverland you were 28 with your parents and your siblings? 9842 1 A. In some kind of combination of siblings and 2 parents, yes. 3 Q. You never once went to Neverland by 4 yourself? 5 A. Like I said, I think I showed up -- I showed 6 up there once, and it was like a day or two and then 7 my family met me there. 8 Q. Your home is New York; is that right? 9 A. Yeah, I’m born and raised in New York. 10 Q. You never lived in Los Angeles? 11 A. Not full time, no. 12 Q. All right. Up until the age of 14, did you 13 ever live in Los Angeles, even part time? 14 A. I did some work in Los Angeles, but besides 15 that, I’m from New York. 16 Q. Where else did you go besides New York, 17 London and Neverland with Michael Jackson, and 18 Bermuda? What other places did you and he travel 19 to? 20 A. We went to Orlando from Bermuda because 21 that’s where Brock and his family lived. 22 Q. Okay. So during that trip, you went to 23 Orlando? 24 A. Yeah, it was the same trip. We swung by 25 there, and then from there I went home. 26 Q. How often did you go to Neverland between 27 the ages of 10 and 14? 28 A. How many times did I go there? 9843 1 Q. Yes. 2 A. A dozen times, maybe more. 3 Q. All those occasions did you sleep in his 4 room? 5 A. At some point or another I think I 6 probably -- I might have ended up sleeping in his 7 room, but I couldn’t really say that I slept there 8 every single time that I was there or anything like 9 that. 10 Q. Would it be safe to say that 90 percent of 11 the time you stayed there? 12 A. In his bedroom? 13 Q. Yes. 14 A. I don’t think it would be 90 percent. It 15 would be -- 16 Q. 80 percent? 17 A. It would be -- I slept in his room about as 18 often as I fell asleep anywhere. Like, I fell 19 asleep -- I would flop down -- we’d fall asleep in 20 the movie theater. He has beds in the movie 21 theater. I’d flop down and fall asleep there. I’ve 22 fallen asleep in the video game machines before. I 23 mean, I’ve -- I would go and play there basically 24 until I’d just run myself out, and I would just flop 25 down wherever I needed to. 26 Q. And you’d be pretty exhausted and go fast 27 asleep; is that right? 28 A. Yeah, I mean, that would happen. I’d wear 9844 1 myself out and fall asleep, just like any kid would. 2 Q. So your question about -- the question that 3 you answered about Mr. Jackson never molesting you, 4 your answer more accurately is he never did while 5 you were awake; is that correct? 6 A. Could you repeat that? 7 Q. Well, your answer to Mr. Mesereau’s question 8 about he never molested you. 9 A. Yes. 10 Q. Your answer more accurately is he never 11 molested you, to your knowledge, while you were 12 awake; is that true? 13 A. As far as I know, he’s never molested me. 14 Q. While you were asleep as a nine-year-old kid 15 who had run himself ragged, you wouldn’t know what 16 happened while you were asleep, right? 17 A. I find that unlikely. 18 Q. Well, but you just told us that sometimes 19 you’d be so exhausted after a day of playing you’d 20 fall asleep on a machine. 21 A. Yeah, but I think I’d realize if something 22 like that was happening to me. 23 Q. Yes? And on many of those occasions, you 24 would fall asleep in his bed? 25 A. It would happen. 26 Q. So you would have no recollection at all, of 27 all of your visits to Neverland, of ever actually 28 making arrangements to simply go to bed like anybody 9845 1 else, putting on pajamas and crawling into bed and 2 turning out the light? 3 A. I never really wore pajamas. But at the 4 same time, it was something like -- I mean, 5 occasionally, yeah, I’d have to -- like, we’d have 6 to wake up early in the morning because -- for 7 whatever reason, because I’d have to -- because we 8 were going to be leaving in the morning or whatever. 9 I mean, sometimes I was put on a schedule. 10 Q. Mr. Culkin, as a nine-year-old child, what 11 did you wear to bed? 12 A. I wore my clothes. 13 Q. You would just wear whatever you were 14 wearing during the day? 15 A. Yeah. 16 Q. Every single night? 17 A. Up until I was about 17 years old. That’s 18 when I kind of discovered what pajamas were. 19 Q. And you did that at home as well? 20 A. Yeah. 21 Q. Whatever you were wearing? 22 A. I always fell asleep in jeans and socks and 23 a T-shirt. 24 Q. All right. So whenever you were at 25 Neverland, you would crawl into bed in jeans and 26 socks and a T-shirt? 27 A. Yeah. 28 Q. Did you ever stay at his condo in Los 9846 1 Angeles? 2 A. Yeah, I think I’ve spent the night there. 3 Q. With your parents? 4 A. I’m not sure if they were there. I know 5 they’d been there before, but I’m not sure if they 6 ever spent the night there. 7 Q. You only spent one night in his condo in Los 8 Angeles? It’s in West L.A.; is that right? 9 A. I don’t really remember exactly where it 10 was. I was always either -- we’d just kind of go 11 there, and it was very secluded. It was in a garage 12 and things like that. That’s where the entrance 13 was. 14 Q. All right. There was a hotel across the 15 street; is that correct? 16 A. I don’t really remember. 17 Q. Were there ever occasions where your parents 18 stayed in the hotel across the street and you stayed 19 at the condo by yourself with Mr. Jackson? 20 A. I don’t really remember. I don’t think so. 21 Q. But that’s possible? 22 A. I’m not sure if they stayed in the hotel 23 across the street or at another hotel. I don’t 24 know. 25 Q. What is your date of birth? 26 A. August 26th, 1980. 27 Q. And you think when you first started coming 28 to Neverland you were nine years old, that would 9847 1 have been 1989? 2 A. About nine or ten years old, so it was 3 probably ‘90 or ‘91, like -- just like -- it was 4 after -- it was after the “Home Alone” movie came 5 out. 6 Q. How old were you when you stopped sleeping 7 in bed with Michael Jackson? 8 A. Well, like I said, I stopped going there 9 just because I had really -- I had never really 10 found myself going to Los Angeles or anything like 11 that. So I didn’t really come back again until I 12 was about 17. 13 Q. The question was, when did you stop 14 sleeping -- 15 A. I know. I’m getting there. 16 And so when I got -- when I started coming 17 back again, I found myself just not sleeping in bed. 18 And I’ve always kind of fell asleep in the guest 19 units ever since then. 20 Q. Why didn’t you stay with Mr. Jackson in his 21 room? 22 A. Because I enjoyed my privacy a little bit 23 more. 24 Q. All right. So is it safe to say that up 25 until and through your 13th year, you stayed with 26 Mr. Jackson in his room? 27 A. On occasion -- 28 Q. More frequent -- 9848 1 A. On occasion I’d fall asleep there or 2 wherever. It wasn’t really like a thing to, like, 3 “Let’s go to sleep in a particular place.” On 4 occasion I’d end up falling asleep there. I’d fall 5 asleep anywhere. 6 Q. After you first met Mr. Jackson, did he 7 telephone you a lot? 8 A. We talked on the phone a good amount. 9 Q. And sometimes those telephone calls would go 10 two or three hours, wouldn’t they? 11 A. Sometimes. I guess. Yeah. 12 Q. Sometimes those telephone calls were in the 13 middle of the night, weren’t they? 14 A. Not really. I was in school. But sometimes 15 it would be in the later side. 16 Q. Did he express affection toward you during 17 those telephone calls? 18 A. How do you mean “affection”? 19 Q. Did he tell you how close he felt to you? 20 A. Yeah, we had a really close relationship 21 because we had this understanding of one another, 22 because one day I was -- 23 MR. ZONEN: I’ll object as exceeding the 24 scope of the question, Your Honor. Nonresponsive. 25 MR. MESEREAU: Objection, Your Honor, he’s 26 cutting off the witness. 27 THE COURT: The objection is overruled. 28 The question was, “Did he tell you how close 9849 1 he felt to you?” 2 THE WITNESS: Yeah, and I’m trying to 3 explain -- 4 THE COURT: You don’t need to explain. 5 THE WITNESS: Okay. I understand. 6 Yeah, we were close. 7 THE COURT: Next question. 8 Q. BY MR. ZONEN: Did he tell you that he had 9 thought of you like family? 10 A. Yes. From what I remember. 11 Q. Did he start telling you about seeing you as 12 family early on in your relationship with him? 13 A. I don’t know how far into the relation -- or 14 friendship it was, that we started talking about how 15 close we felt. But it was definitely something 16 where we understood each other early on. 17 Q. Even when you were nine years old? 18 A. Because of circumstances, yes. 19 Q. Did he give gifts to your parents? 20 A. I think so. But I honestly don’t remember. 21 This is a while ago. But he was -- he was very 22 generous. He always gave gifts to everybody. 23 Q. Do you remember what gifts he gave to your 24 mother? 25 A. Not offhand, no. 26 Q. Do you remember what gifts he gave to your 27 father? 28 A. Not offhand. 9850 1 Q. Did you travel with Mr. Jackson to Las 2 Vegas? 3 A. No. 4 Q. Did you travel with Mr. Jackson to Europe? 5 A. No. 6 Q. Did you travel with Mr. Jackson to South 7 America? 8 A. No. 9 Q. Did you ever stay at Neverland while Jordie 10 Chandler was there? 11 A. I don’t know. I’m not sure if I have. I’m 12 not sure if I know who Jordie Chandler is. 13 Q. Were you ever introduced to Jordie Chandler? 14 A. I couldn’t say. I met handfuls of people 15 kind of going in and out. There was always kind of 16 a revolving door of staff and of people kind of 17 coming in. Sometimes there would be guests there 18 that I had never really met before or things like 19 that. 20 Q. Were you ever in Mr. -- in Mr. Jackson’s 21 bedroom overnight while another boy was present in 22 that room, other than your brothers? 23 A. On occasion, the other kids there that -- 24 like I said, some of them were introduce -- like, I 25 was introduced to as, like, cousins or family 26 friends and stuff like that. And they’d bring their 27 kids there, and then -- same as me. They would -- 28 they would play with me, and we’d fall asleep 9851 1 anywhere, sometimes his bedroom, sometimes in the 2 theater, sometimes anywhere. 3 Q. All right. Do you know whether any of those 4 boys who happened to fall asleep with you in his 5 room, if any of those boys, any one of them, was 6 Jordan Chandler? 7 A. It was 15 years ago. I’m not sure if I 8 remember the names. 9 Q. Are you aware of the allegations in 1993? 10 A. Yes, I was. 11 Q. In 1993, were you aware of the allegations 12 while they were going on? 13 A. Michael had called me about a month or so, 14 or maybe a couple of weeks before the allegations 15 hit the press. And he let me know that some people 16 were going to be saying something, and they were 17 absolutely untrue, and, “Don’t worry about it. I 18 just need you to be my friend right now.” And I 19 said, “Absolutely.” 20 Q. At the time that Mr. Jackson placed that 21 phone call, did you know who Jordan Chandler was? 22 A. I don’t know. I’m not sure exactly who 23 Jordan Chandler is, so I can’t -- I can’t say. 24 Q. But back in ‘93, there wasn’t a face that 25 went with that name? In other words, when he 26 mentioned the name “Jordan Chandler,” was there a 27 face that automatically came to mind for you? 28 A. I think I had met the accuser from ‘93 or 9852 1 ‘94, if that’s who you’re talking about. I had met 2 him once or twice. But I don’t remember his name, 3 so -- 4 Q. How about Jason Francia? Did you ever meet 5 Jason Francia? 6 A. I don’t know. I can’t remember. Like I 7 say, this was -- this was, you know, 13 years ago, 8 you know. 14 years ago. And it wasn’t anything -- 9 it was just sometimes there would be some kids 10 there, you know. 11 Q. Did you ever spend a night in the same room 12 with Brett Barnes at Neverland? 13 A. I’m not sure if I remember Brett Barnes. 14 Q. Did you ever spend a night in the same room 15 with Wade Robson? 16 A. No. 17 Q. Wade Robson you remember? 18 A. I remember him, yes, because he was a very 19 good dancer. And I know him also because of what 20 he’s accomplished in his own career recently. 21 Q. So he’s -- he has stayed in the United 22 States and you’re familiar with him? 23 A. I am familiar with him. He had a T.V. show 24 for a while. 25 Q. You don’t have a recollection of spending a 26 night with Wade Robson in the same room, Michael 27 Jackson’s room; is that correct? 28 A. Not that I remember, no. I mean, we did 9853 1 hang out, the day, like, after the shoot, and we 2 went to his condo in Los Angeles. 3 Q. How many nights did you spend with Michael 4 Jackson alone in his room and in his bed between the 5 ages of 9 and 14? 6 A. How -- could you repeat that? 7 Q. How many nights do you believe you spent 8 alone in Michael Jackson’s room and in his bed, 9 alone with Michael Jackson, between the ages of 9 10 and 14? 11 A. It couldn’t have been more than like -- it 12 was a handful of times. It couldn’t have been more 13 than, like, five times, four times. 14 Q. Sir, you told us it was a handful of times 15 that did you that before you went to Bermuda and 16 that was at age 10? 17 A. Altogether -- like I said, I went a lot 18 between the ages of about 10 and -- about 9 and 12, 19 9 and, like, 11. And then I found -- I never really 20 worked a whole lot in Los Angeles. It was only when 21 I was in town that I would go over there. And I 22 worked -- I worked on two films out here when I 23 was -- one when I was 12, the other one when I was 24 11 or so, or 10. And those are the times that I 25 would go out there, and occasionally I would fall 26 asleep in his room. 27 Q. All right. After age 10, from age 11 28 through 14, how many times do you think you went to 9854 1 Neverland? 2 A. From 10 to 14? Like, six to eight times. 3 Q. And of those six to eight times, how many 4 times of those did you spend in his -- let me redo 5 that again. 6 Six to eight times doesn’t necessarily mean 7 six to eight nights, does it? 8 A. No, I would -- sometimes I would stay for a 9 weekend, sometimes it would be -- I’d try to get up 10 there -- even if it was for a day, I’d go up there. 11 But sometimes it would be, like, four days, 12 sometimes five days. 13 Q. What’s the longest you ever stayed at 14 Neverland? 15 A. When I was -- I think I was 20, I stayed 16 there for about, I don’t know, 10 days, 14 days. 17 And that was the longest trip I’d ever taken there. 18 Q. At age 20? 19 A. Yes. 20 Q. All right. Well, can I assume that at age 21 20 you were not sleeping with Michael Jackson? 22 A. I don’t think he was there on that trip. I 23 kind of just said, “I need to relax. Is it okay if 24 I use your house?” And he said, “Sure.” 25 Q. Even if he was there -- 26 MR. MESEREAU: Objection. He cut off the 27 witness, Your Honor. 28 THE COURT: Sustained. 9855 1 MR. MESEREAU: May the witness complete his 2 answer? 3 THE WITNESS: No -- 4 THE COURT: Yes. 5 THE WITNESS: No, I was just staying there by 6 myself, and I’d just stay in the guest units, and it 7 was just -- it was just that. He wasn’t even there. 8 Q. BY MR. ZONEN: Even at age 20, you wouldn’t 9 have been sleeping with him anyway, would you have? 10 MR. MESEREAU: Objection; calls for 11 speculation. 12 THE COURT: Overruled. 13 You may answer. 14 THE WITNESS: Would you repeat the question? 15 Q. BY MR. ZONEN: But even at age 20, you would 16 not have been sleeping with him in any event; is 17 that correct? 18 A. Probably not. Like I said, you know, as you 19 get older, you start enjoying your privacy and you 20 start getting on more of a schedule. And I was 21 falling asleep on -- I had more of a schedule going. 22 I was basically going out there to write and things 23 like that, and to relax. 24 Q. Probably not -- have you slept with Mr. 25 Jackson since you turned 20? 26 A. No. 27 Q. Were there ever any occasions that you spent 28 a night in Mr. Jackson’s room in the presence of 9856 1 another boy, not your brothers? 2 A. Could you specify? So you’re saying with 3 another boy but not with my brothers or something 4 like that? 5 Q. With another boy, not your brothers. In 6 other words, did you ever -- 7 A. Like I said, yes. 8 Q. Did you ever spend a night in Mr. Jackson’s 9 bedroom with another boy, not your brothers? 10 A. Sometimes. Sometimes, like I said, there 11 would be kids there. They’d be introduced as 12 cousins or something like that. And they would hang 13 with us, just as much as anyone else would. 14 Q. Do you remember the names of any of them? 15 A. Not offhand, no. 16 Q. Can you describe any of them? 17 A. They were kids. They were -- you know, some 18 of them had dark hair. Darker skin, that kind of 19 thing. 20 Q. What is the oldest child who ever stayed 21 with you in Michael Jackson’s room for the night? 22 A. I wouldn’t remember. I mean, they were all 23 about my age, maybe a little bit older. 24 Q. And you were 10 to 12? 25 A. It wasn’t -- what was that? 26 Q. You were 10 to 12 in that period of time, 27 10 to 13? 28 A. Right around there, yeah. Whenever I was 9857 1 around, sometimes there would be other kids around. 2 And, you know, it wasn’t like we all, like, “Oh, 3 it’s time to go to bed. Let’s huddle in.” It’s 4 like, you know, you’re chatting in bed, and the next 5 thing you know you’re asleep. 6 Q. But most of the occasions that you stayed at 7 Michael Jackson’s house was between the ages of 9 8 and 10; is that right? 9 A. Most of the times that I went there? 10 Q. Yes. 11 A. Yeah, just about. Probably that would be 12 about right. When I first -- when I first went 13 there, it was such an amazing place, that I decided 14 to -- you know, any opportunity I had to go out 15 there, I would go. 16 Q. And after the Bermuda trip, your visits to 17 Neverland diminished? They were fewer? 18 A. Not necessarily by choice. I just didn’t 19 really find myself out on the West Coast as often. 20 Q. Did Mr. Jackson ever take you on shopping 21 sprees? 22 A. Yeah, we’d go shopping. 23 Q. Where? 24 A. We used to do this thing where in the middle 25 of the night -- not necessarily the middle of the 26 night, but around, like, after the stores had 27 closed, he would arrange for us to go to Toys-R-Us. 28 And sometimes he wouldn’t even arrange it. We would 9858 1 go there, and he’d literally knock on the door, and 2 the janitor would drop his mop, and go, “What the 3 heck?” and let us in. And then they’d -- you know, 4 we’d go shopping basically at Toys-R-Us when the 5 store was totally empty, because it’s the only time 6 that he could really go shopping like that. 7 Q. How many times did he do that with you? 8 A. Oh, gosh. Like two times, three times -- 9 Q. How old were you? 10 A. -- something like that. 11 About -- I think the first time we did it 12 was, like, ten. 13 Q. Did you ever have a conversation with either 14 of your parents about the propriety of your sharing 15 a bed with Michael Jackson? 16 A. Did I ever have a conversation with him -- 17 with them about what? 18 Q. Let me change that question. 19 Did you ever have a conversation with your 20 parents prior to the age of 13? In other words, 12 21 or younger. While you were 12 years of age or 22 younger, did you ever have a conversation with 23 either of your parents about whether or not you 24 should be sharing a bed with Michael Jackson? 25 A. No. They never really saw it as an issue. 26 Q. Did they know that you were sleeping in his 27 bed? 28 A. I assume so. 9859 1 Q. You assume so? 2 A. I can’t tell you what they -- what they knew 3 or didn’t know or what they thought or didn’t think. 4 Q. Can we assume from that your parents never 5 came into the room while you were in bed with 6 Michael Jackson? 7 A. That’s not true, no. Sometimes my father 8 would wake us up, because he liked going horseback 9 riding or something like that and, you know, things 10 that I didn’t necessarily enjoy as much as he did, 11 but he would wake me up early in the morning to go 12 horseback riding. 13 Q. And you would be in bed alone with Michael 14 Jackson? 15 A. Not always alone, no. And sometimes I 16 wouldn’t be always there. I would be wherever. But 17 I knew they knew that I was in that room, and they 18 knew I fell asleep there. 19 Q. Mr. Culkin -- 20 MR. MESEREAU: Objection, he’s cutting off 21 the witness. 22 MR. ZONEN: The answer is nonresponsive to 23 the question. 24 THE COURT: It’s overruled. And you are 25 cutting him off. 26 THE WITNESS: Yeah, he knew that I was -- 27 MR. ZONEN: There’s no question pending. 28 Q. BY MR. ZONEN: Mr. Culkin -- 9860 1 THE COURT: Well, just a minute. Let me 2 take a minute here. You are getting kind of rushed 3 here. And you are cutting the witness off. 4 I’ll just go back and take a look at this. 5 Ask a new question, please. 6 Q. BY MR. ZONEN: Did your father ever come 7 into Michael Jackson’s bedroom while you were in bed 8 with Mr. Jackson alone? 9 A. From what I remember, yeah. 10 Q. Did that happen more than once? 11 A. Yeah. From I remember, it’s -- I don’t 12 really remember all these kind of details, but I 13 knew he knew I was staying there. So -- and 14 occasionally, I would be woken up to do something 15 that he felt like doing. 16 Q. When was the first time your father walked 17 into the room while you were in bed alone with 18 Michael Jackson? 19 A. I can’t recall. 20 Q. How old were you the first time your father 21 walked into the room when you were alone with 22 Michael Jackson? 23 A. I don’t recall. It was during one of the 24 earlier trips. 25 Q. So you were about nine years old? 26 A. Probably a little bit older. Like -- I 27 don’t think I went there -- I think I went there the 28 first time when I was ten. I think I first met 9861 1 Michael when I was nine. 2 Q. So the first time you would have been alone 3 in bed with him, you were already ten years old? 4 A. Probably, yes. 5 Q. All right. Is there -- was there at the 6 time an alarm on his door going into his bedroom? 7 A. There was like a walkway kind of thing where 8 if somebody was approaching the door, it would kind 9 of like “ding-dong, ding-dong.” 10 Q. All right. Do you remember hearing any 11 “ding-dongs, ding-dongs” as your father came into 12 the room? 13 A. When anyone would approach the room, yeah, 14 you’d hear this kind of -- soft kind of alarm, like 15 “ding-dong” kind of thing. 16 Q. On the occasion that your father came into 17 the room while you were in bed alone with Michael 18 Jackson, did he say anything to you about that? 19 A. No. 20 Q. Did he say anything to Michael Jackson in 21 your presence about your sleeping with him? 22 A. No. He didn’t really seem to have a problem 23 with it, from what I remember. 24 Q. And I asked you if he said anything. Did he 25 say anything to Michael Jackson in your presence? 26 A. Well, what do you mean by “anything”? 27 Q. Did he say anything to Michael Jackson about 28 him sharing a bed with his ten-year-old son? Did he 9862 1 say anything to Michael Jackson about that in your 2 presence at that time? 3 A. No, it was a very casual thing. So, no, he 4 never really said anything. 5 Q. The answer is “No”? 6 A. No, he never said anything. 7 Q. And afterward, when you were alone with your 8 father, did he ever discuss with you about your 9 sharing a bed with Michael Jackson? 10 A. No. 11 Q. When was the next time your father came into 12 the room when you were in bed with Michael Jackson 13 alone? 14 A. I don’t remember the specifics of anything 15 like this. I don’t remember when he, like, came in 16 or when whatever. If I knew I had to remember, I 17 probably would have. 18 Q. Did your mother ever come into the room when 19 you were alone with Michael Jackson in bed? 20 A. It’s a possibility, yeah. 21 Q. Do you remember the first time that 22 happened? 23 A. No, not really, not in any specific detail. 24 Q. Do you know if it happened more than once? 25 A. Yeah. He had a very open-door policy. His 26 bedroom door at that time was never locked. Anyone 27 could walk in. 28 Q. The question was, did your mother come into 9863 1 the room while you were in bed alone with Mr. 2 Jackson more than one time? 3 A. I really couldn’t speak of any specifics 4 like that. 5 Q. Did you ever have a conversation with your 6 mother about whether or not it’s appropriate for a 7 10-year-old boy to be sharing a bed with a 8 35-year-old man on a regular basis? 9 A. No. We didn’t share a bed on a regular 10 basis. 11 Q. Did Mr. Jackson ever talk to you about other 12 boys who shared his bed with you? 13 A. Not really, no. Like I said, it was a 14 casual thing, so it wasn’t necessarily something 15 that was, like, talked about. I’d fall asleep 16 there, I’d fall asleep anywhere. People just kind 17 of fell asleep wherever they wanted to. That was 18 kind of the fun of the place, was that there was no 19 rigid rules about when or where you should fall 20 asleep. 21 Q. Did you share a bed with any other 22 35-year-old man other than a relative during your 23 adolescence? 24 A. Not that I remember, but I wasn’t really 25 friends with a lot of 35-year-olds who actually 26 understood me. 27 Q. Can I assume the answer, then, is “No”? 28 A. No. 9864 1 Q. Are you aware of any of your brothers ever 2 sharing a bed with any other 35-year-old man during 3 their adolescence? 4 A. I can’t speak of that. You’d have to ask, 5 you know, them. 6 Q. Have you ever witnessed any of your brothers 7 sharing a bed with any adult men, not their 8 relatives? 9 A. Not personally, no. 10 Q. Have you ever had a conversation with your 11 parents about sharing a bed with Michael Jackson? 12 A. No. 13 MR. ZONEN: I have no further questions. 14 THE COURT: Redirect? 15 MR. MESEREAU: Yes, please, Your Honor. 16 17 REDIRECT EXAMINATION 18 BY MR. MESEREAU: 19 Q. Mr. Culkin, you’re aware that it is not 20 illegal for someone to allow children to stay in 21 their room? 22 MR. ZONEN: I’ll object as irrelevant and 23 leading. 24 THE COURT: Sustained. 25 Q. BY MR. MESEREAU: You said that Michael 26 Jackson understood you. What did you mean? 27 A. Well, because of circumstances, like with my 28 career, I mean, one day I was essentially a normal 9865 1 kid who happened to be an actor, and the next thing 2 I know, I’m just this thing where people are hiding 3 in the bushes and trying to take your picture. And 4 just -- people are kind of out to profit from you, 5 or next thing you know you have a million 6 acquaintances and no more friends anymore. It was 7 like that. 8 And he understood that. That was one of the 9 first things we talked about, was don’t -- “I get 10 it. I understand what you’re going through. I 11 understand the same thing.” You know, “If you want 12 to talk about anything or if you ever want to” -- 13 you know, I could learn from his knowledge, 14 basically, of where he came from. 15 And you couldn’t really find a whole lot of 16 people, especially when you’re nine years old, put 17 in these circumstances that nobody else -- you can’t 18 really talk to anybody about this kind of stuff. 19 And he understood it, and it was -- it was a 20 comforting thing. 21 Q. Do you still talk to Mr. Jackson about the 22 unique way child actors develop and live? 23 A. On occasion. It’s not like it’s, you know, 24 a child performer self-help group or something like 25 that. But at the same time, it was -- we still 26 talk about it, because we’re a part of a unique 27 group of people. And so we have a unique 28 understanding of one another. 9866 1 And when it goes to any person who is a 2 child performer, I kind of keep an eye out for them, 3 and I -- because I get it. And it goes the same for 4 anyone who, you know, was or, you know, is a child 5 performer. I think you kind of keep an eye out. 6 You have an understanding of them. 7 Q. And when you say you get it, now, what are 8 you saying? 9 MR. ZONEN: Objection. Asked and answered 10 and irrelevant and exceeding the scope of the cross. 11 MR. MESEREAU: I believe the prosecutor 12 opened this all up, Your Honor. 13 THE COURT: The objection is overruled. 14 THE WITNESS: Would you repeat the question? 15 Q. BY MR. MESEREAU: Yes. When you say he gets 16 it, what do you mean, specifically? 17 A. Well, like I said, like the photographers in 18 the bushes, or just profiteers, people looking to -- 19 out to get you kind of thing. And he -- he lived 20 through that before. And so he understood what -- 21 what it was like to be put in a position that I was 22 in, basically just thrust into that position. 23 And it’s weird. It wasn’t necessarily 24 anything I chose for myself. It was something that 25 kind of just happened, and now I have to deal with 26 it. And he understood that. 27 Q. Now, the prosecutor asked you questions 28 about the propriety of a man in his 30s sharing his 9867 1 room with children. Have you ever stayed over at a 2 friend’s house? 3 A. Yes. 4 Q. Ever stayed in a friend’s room? 5 A. Yes. 6 Q. Was it someone not related to you? 7 A. Yeah. 8 Q. Ever thought there was a problem with that? 9 A. Never. 10 Q. Did you ever see Mr. Jackson as very 11 childlike himself? 12 A. He was very childlike, yes. 13 Q. What do you mean? 14 A. He liked doing the things that we liked to 15 do. He liked playing the arcade games. Though he 16 wasn’t as good as us, usually, but, you know, he 17 still enjoyed doing it, because, you know, it was 18 one of those things. And he enjoyed the same kind 19 of movies. He liked running around. We used to 20 play tag. I mean, it’s that kind of thing. He 21 played with us, you know, the same kind of way I 22 played with any of my friends my age. 23 Q. Did Mr. Jackson and you ever discuss the 24 problem of sort of missing out on your childhoods 25 because of all the work and pressures of success? 26 A. It was one of those things that we talked 27 about, yeah. It just -- it kind of just comes with 28 the territory. Like I said, it’s not really, you 9868 1 know, it’s not really a therapy kind of thing. It’s 2 just kind of more like occasionally we would just 3 kind of talk about those kind of things, yes. 4 Q. And you talked about an open-door policy in 5 his room. 6 A. Uh-huh. 7 Q. Could you please explain what you mean? 8 A. Well, no doors were ever really locked in 9 his place. It wasn’t like -- you know, you could 10 always -- you could always come -- he always told 11 me, “You can just come to the ranch whenever you 12 want.” And every door was open, and you can go 13 anywhere you wanted, and that included the bedroom. 14 Q. And did you feel that adults were free to 15 come in and out as well as children? 16 A. Absolutely. He had a lot of memorabilia and 17 things like that in his closets, and so people liked 18 to look at that. It was one of those stops on the 19 tour when we first showed up. It’s like, “Come to 20 the bedroom. Come see what’s in the closet,” those 21 kind of things. Like I said, it’s almost a part of 22 the tour. 23 Q. Now, you talked about shopping sprees Mr. 24 Jackson would take you and other friends on. 25 What -- what other shopping sprees did he take you 26 on, if you remember? 27 A. I think one time when I was -- I mean, 28 besides the Toys-R-Us kind of things, that we just 9869 1 kind of show up in the middle of the night and scare 2 the janitor, I think when I was about 17 or 18, he 3 was in town with Prince, and we went to -- he closed 4 down FAO Schwartz, like, late at night, and we kind 5 of showed up there and shopped a little there. 6 And anywhere he shops, they kind of have to 7 close it down for him, or we have to go late at 8 night, just because -- it just kind of comes with 9 the territory. 10 So I think we also went CD or DVD shopping 11 when we were in London. He was just like, “We’re 12 going to go shopping. Do you want to tag along?” 13 And I went, “Sure.” 14 But besides that, there wasn’t really 15 anything else. Those are the only times that I 16 remember. 17 Q. You said “FAO Schwartz.” Do you mean in New 18 York? 19 A. In New York, yes. 20 Q. Was that on Fifth Avenue? 21 A. Yeah, the one on Fifth Avenue. 22 Q. Near The Plaza Hotel? 23 A. Right across the street. 24 Q. Okay. Did you feel as if there was some 25 ulterior motive or purpose behind Mr. Jackson taking 26 you to toy stores to shop? 27 A. No, it was just to buy toys. Usually to 28 load up on, you know, water guns or something like 9870 1 that. It was just one of those things where -- it 2 was just one of the fun things that you could do 3 while you were hanging out with Michael. 4 Q. Now, the prosecutor asked you questions 5 about him buying you a watch. 6 A. Yes. 7 Q. Did you think anything unusual was -- 8 MR. ZONEN: Objection; exceeds the scope of 9 the cross-examination. 10 MR. MESEREAU: It does not, Your Honor. 11 MR. ZONEN: I’ll withdraw the objection. 12 I’ll withdraw the objection. 13 Q. BY MR. MESEREAU: The prosecutor talked 14 about Mr. Jackson buying you a watch. Do you 15 remember anything unusual about his buying you a 16 gift? 17 A. Not at all. No, it was one of those things 18 where, like, yeah, we’d go shopping or something 19 like that. I thought it was a very nice gift. But 20 at the same time, it was very sweet. And he 21 actually had it engraved for me, it was like, you 22 know, “From Michael Jackson,” you know, “1991,” or 23 “’92,” or something like that. I haven’t seen it in 24 a bunch of years, but I know I have it somewhere in 25 a box. 26 Q. Now, in response to the prosecutor’s 27 questions you talked about Michael Jackson being 28 generous. What do you mean? 9871 1 A. He was just very open and giving with not 2 only his money and what he -- you know, but like 3 even just what he had. 4 I remember a friend of mine had, like, you 5 know -- no, it was my brother. He liked a box, a 6 certain box. It was this wooden box. “Is it all 7 right if I have it?” And he didn’t give it a second 8 thought. It’s that kind of thing. 9 He just kind of -- he’ll let me go there, go 10 to Neverland anytime I want. And he will let you 11 use whatever you need to, and go wherever you need 12 to go. And he’s just a very good friend. 13 Q. Now, the prosecutor asked you questions 14 about maybe being molested when you were asleep and 15 not knowing about it. And you said words to the 16 effect, you would have known about it. What did you 17 mean? 18 A. I think I would have realized if something 19 like that was happening to me, whether I was asleep 20 or not. 21 Q. Do you have any reason to suspect that Mr. 22 Jackson at any time improperly touched you? 23 A. Not at all. 24 Q. Do you have any reason to suspect that Mr. 25 Jackson at any time had a plan to sort of become 26 your friend so he could molest you? 27 A. Not at all. 28 Q. Do you have any reason to suspect that Mr. 9872 1 Jackson at any time was manipulating you with gifts 2 or generosity so he could, at the right moment, 3 strike and touch you sexually? 4 A. No, never. 5 Q. Okay. Now, the prosecutor asked you 6 questions about Mr. Jackson referring to you and 7 your family as family. And you said you thought he 8 had done that on occasion, right? 9 A. Yeah. 10 Q. And what do you recall about that? 11 A. Well, we were very close. I know my mother 12 had had contact with my father, had talked to him 13 when I wasn’t talking to him. It was just one of 14 those things where he was a close family friend, 15 like family. 16 Q. And the prosecutor asked you questions about 17 whether you felt Mr. Jackson was somehow pressuring 18 you somehow to do something improper. Did you ever 19 feel as if Mr. Jackson was pressuring you to do 20 anything? 21 A. He never pressured me to do anything at all. 22 Just -- he was just my friend. He never really 23 pressured me to do anything. Not even go to sleep 24 at the right time or eat my vegetables, you know. 25 Q. Did you see Mr. Jackson allow other children 26 and families into his room? 27 A. Yeah. It was, you know, whenever -- it 28 was -- like I said, it was an open-door policy, not 9873 1 only for me but for whatever other families were 2 there. 3 Q. Now, the prosecutor asked you questions 4 about the trip to Bermuda. And you recall that 5 trip? 6 A. Yeah, I mean vaguely. It was like a 7 week-long trip. 8 Q. Do you recall having a pleasant time on that 9 trip? 10 A. Yeah, we had a good time. 11 Q. Do you recall Mr. Jackson somehow trying to 12 pressure you to do anything improper on the trip? 13 A. Not at all. 14 Q. Did you feel that when Mr. Jackson gave you 15 this engraved watch as a gift, that he was somehow 16 luring you into something? 17 A. Not at all. It was just a very nice gift. 18 He had given my father a gold coin before, and 19 things like that. I mean, he gave very nice gifts. 20 Q. To adults and children, right? 21 A. Yes. 22 Q. Okay. Now, you were in Bermuda with someone 23 named Brock; is that correct? 24 A. Yeah, I was. 25 Q. Who was Brock? 26 A. He was a friend of ours. He lives in the 27 neighborhood that I was living in in Orlando. And 28 they had, like, a community center, something like 9874 1 that. This is before the “Home Alone” movie had 2 come out. So it was just kind of like -- it was 3 still easy for me to go to like a community center 4 and play basketball or whatever. And he was just 5 one of those kids I met, and played a lot of video 6 games and hung out, things like that. 7 Q. Was Brock a close friend of yours at the 8 time? 9 A. At the time, yeah, we were good friends. 10 Q. Has he stayed a friend of yours? 11 A. I haven’t spoken to him for a long time. He 12 lived in Orlando. I’m from New York. 13 Q. Do you recall Mr. Jackson doing anything 14 that was disrespectful to Brock or his family on the 15 trip? 16 A. Not that I know of, no. 17 Q. Did you have a good time with Mr. Jackson on 18 the trip? 19 A. Yeah, we had a very good time. 20 Q. Okay. Now, in any of your trips where you 21 visited Mr. Jackson in Los Angeles, did you ever 22 feel as if he was doing anything of a suspicious 23 nature to you? 24 A. No, not at all. 25 Q. In response to the prosecutor’s questions, 26 you said that in 1993 Mr. Jackson called you and 27 said these allegations were false, right? 28 A. Yes. 9875 1 Q. And had you discussed with Mr. Jackson from 2 time to time those false allegations? 3 A. Not really. It’s not something we 4 necessarily talk about. It’s -- its -- you know, I 5 think it’s just a painful subject. It was a hard 6 thing for everyone to go through, I mean especially 7 him. It just -- it’s a hard subject. 8 Q. Did you ever consider making false 9 allegations against Mr. Jackson so you could get 10 money? 11 A. Absolutely not. 12 Q. Did you ever even imagine doing such a 13 thing? 14 A. No. 15 Q. Ever consider running to a lawyer and coming 16 up with a claim against Mr. Jackson? 17 MR. ZONEN: Objection. Argumentative and 18 leading and irrelevant. 19 THE COURT: Sustained; argumentative. 20 MR. MESEREAU: No further questions, Your 21 Honor. 22 23 RECROSS-EXAMINATION 24 BY MR. ZONEN: 25 Q. You’re telling us that Mr. Jackson had no 26 problem with people going through the closets in his 27 bedroom? 28 A. Yeah, it was one of those things. I mean, I 9876 1 don’t necessarily think it was a good thing to rifle 2 through everything, but it was -- 3 Q. But people did? 4 A. He had a large closet. Like I said, he had 5 a lot of his old rhinestone jackets and things like 6 that in there. 7 Q. People did that? 8 A. People would go in there, yes. 9 Q. Sometimes people he didn’t even know? 10 A. Well, I can’t really speak of whether or not 11 they knew him or not. I assumed if they were there, 12 they knew him. 13 Q. Certainly people who were in his room with 14 his permission had his permission as well to go 15 through the closets and look at the memorabilia in 16 his closets; is that right? 17 A. Sure. Like I said, it was another stop on 18 the tour. It was another kind of thing. 19 Q. It would be nothing unusual at all about 20 somebody who was in his room with his permission to 21 go through his closets and his drawers? 22 A. Well, I wouldn’t necessarily say the 23 drawers. But it was kind of more -- one of the 24 closets was a lot -- definitely a lot more for 25 display than it was for, you know, actual clothing. 26 Q. You said he was childlike. Are you 27 referring to his behavior back when you were 10 and 28 11 years old? 9877 1 A. Yeah. I mean, even now, he’s more of a 2 father now. It’s kind of fun for me to see that. 3 But at the same time, yeah, I mean, he still has 4 kidlike qualities. 5 Q. Do you believe that his possession of a 6 great deal of sexually explicit material is 7 consistent with him being childlike? 8 A. How do you mean? 9 Q. Him possessing a lot of magazines that are 10 very sexually explicit? 11 A. It depends on what you are talking about. 12 When I was 12 or 13 years old, I had a 13 couple of Playboys under my bed. 14 Q. How about magazines that depict men and 15 women engaged in sex acts, magazines with men and 16 men engaged in sex acts? 17 A. What about them? 18 Q. Magazines of women inserting things inside 19 of them? Would you believe that possession of those 20 kinds of magazines, and a number of them, would it 21 be consistent with or inconsistent with his being 22 childlike? 23 A. Well, I think -- I don’t think there’s 24 anything wrong with having those things, whether 25 you’re childlike or not. 26 I mean, overall, he’s still a human being, 27 and it’s something that human beings possess. And 28 so I don’t really necessarily find that 9878 1 inappropriate. But -- but, yeah, I don’t find it 2 inappropriate. 3 Q. But it’s surprising to you that he would be 4 in possession of all of that; is that right? 5 A. Not necessarily, no. 6 Q. Did you ever watch him give things away to 7 his employees as well? 8 A. Not firsthand. But I know it was something 9 that did happen. 10 Q. Based on your knowledge of his generosity, 11 you wouldn’t be surprised? 12 A. I wouldn’t -- 13 Q. Hold on. Hold on. Wait till the question 14 is finished. 15 A. Sorry. 16 Q. Based on your knowledge of his generosity, 17 you wouldn’t be surprised if he gave things away to 18 his employees, for no more reason than he expressed 19 admiration for them; is that right? 20 A. I guess so. But I couldn’t speak of it. 21 But he was a very generous person. 22 MR. ZONEN: Thank you. I have no further 23 questions. 24 THE COURT: Counsel, it’s time for a break. 25 Are you going to ask questions? 26 MR. MESEREAU: Yeah, I have a few more, Your 27 Honor. 28 THE COURT: All right. We’ll take a break. 9879 1 (Recess taken.) 2 --o0o-- 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 9880 1 REPORTER’S CERTIFICATE 2 3 4 THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE ) 5 OF CALIFORNIA, ) 6 Plaintiff, ) 7 -vs- ) No. 1133603 8 MICHAEL JOE JACKSON, ) 9 Defendant. ) 10 11 12 I, MICHELE MATTSON McNEIL, RPR, CRR, 13 CSR #3304, Official Court Reporter, do hereby 14 certify: 15 That the foregoing pages 9807 through 9880 16 contain a true and correct transcript of the 17 proceedings had in the within and above-entitled 18 matter as by me taken down in shorthand writing at 19 said proceedings on May 11, 2005, and thereafter 20 reduced to typewriting by computer-aided 21 transcription under my direction. 22 DATED: Santa Maria, California, 23 May 11, 2005. 24 25 26 27 MICHELE MATTSON McNEIL, RPR, CRR, CSR #3304 28 9881 1 SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA 2 IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF SANTA BARBARA 3 SANTA MARIA BRANCH; COOK STREET DIVISION 4 DEPARTMENT SM-2 HON. RODNEY S. MELVILLE, JUDGE 5 6 7 THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF. ) 8 CALIFORNIA, ) 9 Plaintiff, ) 10 -vs- ) No. 1133603 11 MICHAEL JOE JACKSON, ) 12 Defendant. ) 13 14 15 16 17 REPORTER’S TRANSCRIPT OF PROCEEDINGS 18 19 WEDNESDAY, MAY 11, 2005 20 21 8:30 A.M. 22 23 (PAGES 9882 THROUGH 9952) 24 25 26 27 REPORTED MICHELE MATTSON McNEIL, RPR, CRR, CSR #3304 28 BY: Official Court Reporter 9882 1 APPEARANCES OF COUNSEL: 2 3 For Plaintiff: THOMAS W. SNEDDON, JR., 4 District Attorney -and- 5 RONALD J. ZONEN, Sr. Deputy District Attorney 6 -and- GORDON AUCHINCLOSS, 7 Sr. Deputy District Attorney 1112 Santa Barbara Street 8 Santa Barbara, California 93101 9 10 11 For Defendant: COLLINS, MESEREAU, REDDOCK & YU BY: THOMAS A. MESEREAU, JR., ESQ. 12 -and- SUSAN C. YU, ESQ. 13 1875 Century Park East, Suite 700 Los Angeles, California 90067 14 -and- 15 SANGER & SWYSEN 16 BY: ROBERT M. SANGER, ESQ. 233 East Carrillo Street, Suite C 17 Santa Barbara, California 93101 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 9883 1 I N D E X 2 3 Note: Mr. Sneddon is listed as “SN” on index. 4 Mr. Zonen is listed as “Z” on index. Mr. Auchincloss is listed as “A” on index. 5 Mr. Franklin is listed as “F” on index. Mr. Mesereau is listed as “M” on index. 6 Ms. Yu is listed as “Y” on index. Mr. Sanger is listed as “SA” on index. 7 Mr. Oxman is listed as “O” on index. 8 9 DEFENDANT’S 10 WITNESSES DIRECT CROSS REDIRECT RECROSS 11 VAN NORMAN, James F. 9886-SA 9916-SN 9931-SA 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 9884 1 E X H I B I T S 2 FOR IN DEFENDANT’S NO. DESCRIPTION I.D. EVID. 3 4 5009-A DVD - Hamid Moslehi outtakes 9951 5 5009-B DVD - Hamid Moslehi 6 outtakes 9951 7 5009-C DVD - Hamid Moslehi outtakes 9951 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 9885 1 THE COURT: Counsel? 2 MR. MESEREAU: Yes, Your Honor. I apologize 3 to the Court. I’ve reconsidered, and I have no 4 further questions. 5 THE COURT: No apologies necessary. 6 MR. MESEREAU: Okay. 7 THE COURT: You may step down. 8 Call your next witness. 9 MR. SANGER: We’ll call James Van Norman. 10 THE COURT: Come forward, please. When you 11 get to the witness stand, please remain standing. 12 Face the clerk and raise your right hand. 13 14 JAMES F. VAN NORMAN 15 Having been sworn, testified as follows: 16 17 THE WITNESS: I do. 18 THE CLERK: Please be seated. State and 19 spell your name for the record. 20 THE WITNESS: James F. Van Norman. Capital 21 V-a-n, capital N-o-r-m-a-n. 22 THE CLERK: Thank you. 23 24 DIRECT EXAMINATION 25 BY MR. SANGER: 26 Q. Okay. Mr. Van Norman, the first thing I’m 27 going to ask is try to use that microphone that’s on 28 your right there. 9886 1 A. Okay. 2 Q. And you have -- as you just did, you have to 3 kind of sit close to it. It’s a little hard to do 4 in this courtroom. Everybody’s had that problem. 5 Okay. First of all, do you know the 6 gentleman seated here to my right? 7 A. Yes, I do. 8 Q. And who is that? 9 A. Michael Jackson. 10 Q. All right. When did you first meet Mr. 11 Jackson? 12 A. The first time I met Michael was -- it was 13 either 1990 or 1991 while I was employed with 14 Madonna. 15 Q. What were you doing for Madonna at that 16 time? 17 A. Personal security. 18 Q. Is that like a bodyguard? 19 A. Yes, sir. 20 Q. All right. Now, let me go back to your 21 background and education. Do you have any 22 particular education, formal education, in the area 23 of becoming a bodyguard? 24 A. I have a Bachelor’s of Arts from Arizona 25 State in criminology. As for being a bodyguard, I 26 just got into it in college and kept working it. 27 Q. And what did you do immediately after 28 college? 9887 1 A. I went to work for different organizations 2 in the security field. 3 Q. All right. Did you do anything -- did you 4 have any other employment other than the security 5 field? 6 A. No. 7 Q. All right. And when you went into the 8 security field, eventually you started working for 9 Madonna; is that correct? 10 A. Eventually, I went to work for Madonna in 11 1988. 12 Q. And prior to ‘88, did you have other 13 experience as a bodyguard or personal security 14 person? 15 A. Yes, I worked for a company out of Dayton, 16 Ohio, called Professional Law Enforcement, a 17 division of Business Risk International. I did a 18 lot of strike work where I worked as a bodyguard for 19 the comptrollers and the CEOs of the companies. 20 Q. All right. Now, when you went to work for 21 Madonna, can you describe the kind of work that you 22 did for her. You said bodyguard, personal security. 23 What was the level of your involvement? 24 MR. SNEDDON: I’m going to object as 25 immaterial and irrelevant. 26 THE COURT: Sustained. 27 Q. BY MR. SANGER: All right. When you first 28 met with Mr. Jackson and you first went to work for 9888 1 him, what was your assignment? 2 A. I was working personal security for Mr. 3 Jackson. 4 Q. All right. And what did that entail? Did 5 that entail going on tour? Or give us an idea. 6 A. At first it entailed -- I started doing a 7 lot of video shoots, where we’d, you know, be on 8 site working the video shoots. I’d be making sure 9 anybody coming to see Michael had to check in with 10 us, and I’d be with him if we were out of town. If 11 we did a tour, I went on the tour. 12 Q. All right. Now, there are different -- let 13 me withdraw that. 14 How many different security people worked 15 for Mr. Jackson around that period of time when you 16 first started working for him? 17 A. When I first started, there was -- there was 18 an A team, a B team, and then you’d have your ranch 19 security also. 20 Q. All right. So let’s talk about what the A 21 team and the B team did. 22 A. The A team was his personal security that 23 was with him 24/7 as a bodyguard. The B team 24 usually worked -- they worked some video shoots, but 25 they were usually on tour, and they would do the 26 stadium set-up ahead of time with the local 27 security, and they’d do some advance work. 28 Q. All right. So were you on the A team or the 9889 1 B team? 2 A. A team. 3 Q. So the B team might go -- if there was a 4 venue where Mr. Jackson was going to perform, the B 5 team might go in advance and set up all the security 6 and work with local police, that sort of thing? 7 A. Yes, they’d be there ahead of time, before 8 us, to make sure we got into the building safely. 9 Q. All right. And the A team, when the A team 10 traveled, did the A team travel with Mr. Jackson 11 personally? 12 A. Yes, sir. 13 Q. All right. So you wouldn’t go ahead and 14 just be there to greet him? 15 A. No. I’d be with him personally. 16 Q. And how long did you maintain that position 17 as a member of the A team traveling personally with 18 Mr. Jackson? 19 A. Probably 1991 until sometime in ‘94. 20 Q. Okay. Was part of the concern that you had 21 or part of your job to make sure that Mr. Jackson 22 was personally safe, in other words, not assaulted? 23 A. Yes, sir. 24 Q. Was that a concern during that period of 25 time, from ‘91 to ‘94? 26 A. Always. 27 Q. And was that part of your training through 28 the other company you had worked for, to deal with 9890 1 the potential for assault? 2 A. Yes, sir. 3 Q. And I earlier asked, and I’m going to ask a 4 slightly different question, so see if I -- so don’t 5 answer it until there’s a chance to object. 6 MR. SNEDDON: Could I ask counsel to stop 7 the gratuitous remarks and get to the question? I 8 object. 9 MR. SANGER: Well, and I object to that. 10 THE COURT: Well, I object to both of you. 11 (Laughter.) 12 MR. SNEDDON: Well, the same objection was 13 made -- 14 THE COURT: Be quiet, Mr. Sneddon. You raise 15 an objection with one word. 16 MR. SNEDDON: I object. 17 THE COURT: (To Mr. Sanger) same with you. 18 Overruled. Next question. 19 MR. SANGER: Okay. 20 Q. So this question: Did you learn anything 21 from your work with Madonna as to how to deal with 22 celebrities? 23 A. Yes, sir. 24 Q. Okay. And what sorts of lessons did you 25 learn from working with Madonna? 26 A. I’m -- 27 Q. Let’s put it this way: Is there a 28 particular issue with regards to fans, in other 9891 1 words, fans who may appear to be adoring fans? Is 2 that always a safe thing to assume? 3 A. No, it’s not. 4 Q. All right. Now, in your work with Mr. 5 Jackson, you said you traveled from time to time; is 6 that correct? 7 A. Yes, sir. 8 Q. Where did you travel to from ‘91 to ‘94? 9 A. All over the world. Everywhere. 10 Q. Who was the head of the security department, 11 let us say, for Mr. Jackson during that period of 12 time? 13 A. Bill Bray. 14 Q. All right. And did Bill Bray have an 15 office? 16 A. Yes, he did. 17 Q. Where was that? 18 A. Down in Westwood. 19 Q. And was that -- was there an office for MJJ 20 Productions? 21 A. Yes, sir. 22 Q. Was his office in that corporate office? 23 A. Yes, sir. 24 Q. What was MJJ Productions, to your knowledge? 25 A. Michael J. Jackson Promotions, Productions. 26 Q. Okay. So it was his company; is that right? 27 A. Yes, sir. 28 Q. And what did MJJ Productions do? What did 9892 1 they -- you said promotions. What did they promote? 2 A. They did everything. I mean, they got 3 involved with the tours. They handled all of 4 Michael’s business affairs. 5 Q. All right. Now, Mr. Bray, who you referred 6 to, was then in charge of a particular part of this. 7 Can you describe what -- first of all, what was the 8 name of his organization, if he had one? 9 A. It was the Office of Special Services, and 10 they handled all of Michael’s personal security 11 needs and all kinds of security needs. 12 Q. All right. Did he do some things other than 13 strictly security? 14 A. He probably did, but I don’t recall. 15 Q. All right. So Mr. Bray was in charge of the 16 A team and the B team; is that correct? 17 A. Yes, sir. 18 Q. And in charge of Mr. Jackson’s security in 19 general, no matter what, wherever it was? 20 A. Yes, sir. 21 Q. Did Mr. Bray sometimes travel on tour? 22 A. All the time. 23 Q. Now, Mr. Bray was there when you started 24 working for Mr. Jackson, correct? 25 A. Mr. Bray hired me. 26 Q. All right. And do you have any idea of how 27 long Mr. Bray had been with Mr. Jackson? 28 A. 25, 30 years. 9893 1 Q. Okay. What was Mr. Bray’s background? 2 A. Law enforcement. 3 Q. And what particularly in law enforcement? 4 A. He was with the LAPD. 5 Q. Was he retired? 6 A. Yes, sir. 7 Q. He had been in the robbery/homicide squad? 8 A. I believe so. 9 Q. All right. Now, did Mr. Bray have a second 10 in command, as it were, of his security operation? 11 A. Yes, sir. 12 Q. Who was that? 13 A. Wayen Nagen. 14 Q. And did Wayen Nagen travel on tour? 15 A. Yes, sir. 16 Q. Did he have anybody else in his -- in his 17 direct chain of command? 18 A. By other -- 19 Q. Well, let me ask you, do you know who Betty 20 Bailey is? 21 A. Yes. 22 Q. Who is Betty Bailey? 23 A. Betty was Bill’s assistant at the time. 24 Q. So maybe I did the “chain of command” 25 incorrectly there. 26 Did Betty Bailey also have an office -- 27 A. Yes, sir. 28 Q. -- in Los Angeles? And what was her 9894 1 background? 2 A. I’m really not sure. I don’t remember. 3 Q. All right. Was it law enforcement? Or you 4 don’t know? 5 A. It might have been. 6 Q. In any event, this was the office that you 7 reported to; is that correct? 8 A. Yes, sir. 9 Q. And you coordinated your activities to 10 protect Mr. Jackson? 11 A. Yes, sir. 12 Q. How many people were on the A team, 13 generally? 14 A. Six. 15 Q. Six people? And how many on the B team? 16 A. Anywhere from six to eight. 17 Q. Now, on a particular venue, when there was a 18 concert or at a particular venue when there was a 19 concert, would security interact with local police? 20 A. Yes, sir. 21 Q. And just briefly, describe how that would 22 work. 23 A. We’d meet with them, or the advance guy 24 would meet with them ahead of time to work out 25 traffic, work out escape routes, different things 26 throughout -- you know, that’s going to go on during 27 a concert that we needed to let them be aware of. 28 Q. Now, when the concert was not going on, I 9895 1 take it that there were times Mr. Jackson would be 2 residing off of his property; he’d be residing at a 3 hotel somewhere in the world? 4 A. Yes, sir. 5 Q. Did you provide security in that respect as 6 well? 7 A. Yes, sir. 8 Q. All right. And did you work with the hotel 9 security to try to coordinate things? 10 A. All the time. 11 Q. When you traveled with Mr. Jackson, where 12 would you personally stay? 13 A. I was usually in the room right next door to 14 Mr. Jackson. 15 Q. Would that be in a suite with an adjoining 16 door, or -- 17 A. At times there was adjoining doors. 18 Sometimes it was the small little maid’s quarters. 19 It all depended on where we were. I mean, sometimes 20 I had a suite. Sometimes I had a little room. It 21 didn’t matter. 22 Q. All right. And how much of the day would 23 you personally spend with Mr. Jackson from ‘91 to 24 ‘94? 25 A. That would all depend on what was going on. 26 I mean, sometimes he’d stay in his room. Sometimes 27 we’d go out for the whole day. I mean, all depended 28 on the day, what was going on. And if he had a show 9896 1 the night before, he’d stay in most of the next day. 2 Q. Was it easier to go out with Mr. Jackson in 3 Europe than in the United States? 4 A. Oh, no. I don’t think so. 5 Q. Was it harder? 6 A. Yes. 7 Q. Okay. And why was that? 8 A. They had a large fan base, and you’re in 9 different countries, different customs, different 10 rules and regulations, and, you know, in certain 11 countries they let the fans run wild where there was 12 no, you know, outside security helping us, so it 13 could become quite chaotic. 14 Q. Was it easy for Mr. Jackson to go out in the 15 United States? 16 A. No. 17 Q. During the period of time you were with Mr. 18 Jackson from ‘91 to ‘94, can you describe what it 19 would be like for Mr. Jackson to try to go to, say, 20 a mall to shop? 21 MR. SNEDDON: I’m going to object as 22 immaterial; irrelevant. 23 MR. SANGER: It’s going -- 24 THE COURT: What’s the relevancy? 25 MR. SANGER: Do you want me -- 26 THE COURT: What is the relevancy? 27 MR. SANGER: Mr. Van Norman took over as 28 ranch manager in ‘94 and took over the security 9897 1 concerns of the ranch itself. 2 THE COURT: All right. Well, then the 3 objection is sustained on the question that was 4 asked. 5 MR. SANGER: All right. 6 Q. As far as going out in public in general, 7 was Mr. Jackson able to simply go out in public 8 without a group of security people? 9 A. Very rare occasions. 10 Q. And if he did that, how would he do it? 11 MR. SANGER: I’ll object. Immaterial and 12 irrelevant. 13 THE COURT: Sustained. 14 Q. BY MR. SANGER: All right. A little more 15 direct question, if I may. 16 Would he have to wear a disguise, for the 17 most part, to go out? 18 A. Sometimes. 19 MR. SNEDDON: Object as immaterial and 20 irrelevant. 21 THE COURT: Overruled. The answer was, 22 “Sometimes.” Next question. 23 Q. BY MR. SANGER: All right. Now, in 1993, do 24 you recall some particular publicity coming out 25 about Mr. Jackson that caused additional security 26 concerns? 27 A. Yes. 28 Q. And what was that? 9898 1 A. That was the Jordie Chandler case. 2 Q. Okay. The allegations that were made at 3 that time; yes? 4 A. Yes. 5 Q. And those -- those allegations were 6 published in the press widely? 7 A. Yes, sir. 8 Q. Were they published in the mainstream press? 9 A. Published all over the world. 10 Q. Did that -- what did that -- what effect did 11 that have on Mr. Jackson’s personal security? 12 A. It got a lot tougher for us, not only with 13 the fans, but then we had the media that was all 14 over us also. 15 Q. Okay. And at some point, did you -- or let 16 me withdraw that. 17 When did you first go to Neverland Ranch? 18 A. The first time I went to Neverland Ranch was 19 after the “Dangerous” tour in ‘93. 20 Q. All right. And was that at the time that 21 these allegations had surfaced and the media was 22 publishing all sorts of things? 23 A. Yes, sir. 24 Q. All right. So you had not been to the ranch 25 before that had occurred? 26 A. No. 27 Q. So you don’t know what the security policies 28 were at the ranch prior to your arriving there; is 9899 1 that correct? 2 A. Correct. 3 Q. All right. When you arrived there at the 4 ranch, was Mr. Jackson with you? 5 A. No. 6 Q. And what was your purpose in going to the 7 ranch? 8 A. To secure it for his arrival. He was coming 9 back from London. 10 Q. All right. So you were there a matter of 11 days before he got there? 12 A. About a day or two. 13 Q. Day or two. All right. And then Mr. 14 Jackson was there at the ranch, correct? 15 A. Yes, sir. 16 Q. Was he there continuously at the ranch 17 through the end of your tenure? 18 A. No, he wasn’t there continuously. He would 19 only come at different times. 20 Q. He would go different places? 21 A. Different places, yes. 22 Q. At what point did you cease being on the A 23 team, as it were, and start working at the ranch? 24 A. Sometime in ‘94 Michael asked me to look 25 after the ranch for him, so I did. 26 Q. And were you at some point, in essence, the 27 ranch manager? 28 A. Yes, sir. 9900 1 Q. Did you move to this area? 2 A. Yes, I did. 3 Q. Where did you move to? 4 A. At first I stayed on the ranch itself. And 5 then I moved into Los Olivos, and eventually I was 6 down in the same area. 7 Q. Santa Ynez area? 8 A. Santa Ynez, yes. 9 Q. And how long did you live there? 10 A. Upwards till August of ‘98. 11 Q. Okay. And then in August of 1998, did 12 you -- what did you do? 13 A. I went to work for the Viejas Indian Tribe 14 down in San Diego. 15 Q. Is that where you still work? 16 A. Yes, sir. 17 Q. And your wife was employed; is that correct? 18 A. Yes, sir. 19 Q. What was her employment? 20 MR. SNEDDON: Object as immaterial and 21 irrelevant, Your Honor. 22 THE COURT: Sustained. 23 Q. BY MR. SANGER: Did your wife’s employment 24 have anything to do with your moving? 25 A. No. 26 Q. All right. So in ‘93, you come to -- I’m 27 sorry, ‘93 you come to the ranch. And was there a 28 security office at the ranch? 9901 1 A. Yes, there was. 2 Q. Did they have security guards? 3 A. Yes, they did. 4 Q. Who was in charge of that at that time? 5 A. I believe his name was Bob Wagner. 6 Q. After Mr. Wagner, who took over? 7 A. I think there was a brief time where the 8 lieutenant just stepped in, Steve Bailey, and then 9 Kassim Abdool. 10 Q. And did Mr. Abdool become the chief of 11 security? 12 A. From what I recall, yes. 13 Q. Okay. Did you carry a firearm at the ranch 14 in 1993, ‘94? 15 A. Yes, I did. 16 Q. Did you carry the firearm at all times? 17 A. On the ranch, yes. 18 Q. And you were trained in firearm safety; is 19 that right? 20 A. Years ago, yes. 21 Q. Did you ever display your firearm at anybody 22 for any purpose? 23 A. Never. 24 Q. Are you aware that Mr. Abdool alleged that 25 you pulled out your firearm and pointed it through 26 the gate at a fan? 27 A. I’m aware of that, yes. 28 Q. Did that ever happen? 9902 1 A. No, sir. 2 Q. Did you ever display your firearm in any 3 way? 4 A. No, sir. 5 Q. In other words, you carried it on your 6 person? 7 A. Yes, sir. 8 Q. Did you ever walk around with a gun just 9 strapped to your hip? 10 A. No. 11 Q. All right. All right. Now, at the time you 12 were getting the ranch prepared in ‘93 for that day 13 or two before Mr. Jackson got there, what were your 14 concerns at that time as far as security was 15 concerned? 16 A. We had a lot of media build-up outside, and 17 then of course we found a few of them sneaking onto 18 the property. So they’d be hiding in bushes. 19 They’d be doing whatever they can to get a picture. 20 So we did have a lot of concern of people getting 21 onto the property and getting close to the house. 22 Q. Was there a concern about fans as well as 23 media? 24 A. Yes, sir. 25 Q. What was the concern about fans? 26 A. Same thing. They want to get on the 27 property and try to get as close to Michael as they 28 could. 9903 1 Q. Around that time, was there a lot of 2 activity at the front gate? 3 A. Yes. 4 Q. Can you describe what that was like? 5 A. Lots of media trucks, lots of fans, you 6 know, upwards of 5- or 600 people just standing out 7 there waiting to see who’s coming in and who’s 8 going. 9 Q. Did you evaluate the security systems at the 10 ranch at that time? 11 A. I took a look at them, yes. 12 Q. Okay. Did you do anything to change them? 13 A. I tried, but they didn’t get changed. 14 Q. All right. Were the security systems state 15 of the art? 16 A. No, sir. 17 Q. Can you describe them? 18 A. There was some sensors outside that, you 19 know, usually the deer or the raccoons would 20 trigger. The house wasn’t very secure at the time. 21 That’s about it. It wasn’t -- it wasn’t a good 22 security system at the time. 23 Q. During the time that you were there, did you 24 make some changes with regard to securing the house? 25 A. Yes, sir. 26 Q. And what kinds of changes? 27 A. We limited the access to the house. At 28 times we posted guards at the house. Key access 9904 1 especially. That, you know, to let the doors be 2 opened by only certain individuals so the house 3 would be locked down so nobody could get in it 4 unless they were, you know, supposed to go into it. 5 Q. And did this happen immediately or did this 6 take place over time? 7 A. It took place over time. 8 Q. Now, you said key access. Were there key 9 pads on the house, or were there keys, or do you 10 remember? 11 A. There were keys at that time. 12 Q. All right. And so you limited -- you 13 started, over this period of time, starting to 14 insist that the doors actually be locked? 15 A. Yes, sir. 16 Q. And that certain people would have keys to 17 get in; is that right? 18 A. Yes, sir. 19 Q. Were guests given keys? 20 A. No, sir. 21 Q. So if somebody wanted to get in, they’d call 22 security? 23 A. They’d call security, yes. 24 Q. Did they call housekeeping? 25 A. They had keys also. 26 Q. All right. Now, nevertheless, if there were 27 guests staying at the -- staying on the property in 28 the guest units, for instance, would they be allowed 9905 1 to have free access to the house? 2 A. Yes, sir. 3 Q. All right. So who were you trying to keep 4 out? 5 A. Fans and media. 6 Q. All right. During the period of time you 7 were there, did any fans actually penetrate the 8 property? 9 A. Yes, sir. 10 Q. About how many occasions? 11 A. There was quite a few that they got on the 12 property. As to actually getting to the house, 13 there was a few occasions that they did actually get 14 to the house, and one occasion where they got in. 15 Q. Okay. And where did the person get in? 16 Where did the person who got in end up? 17 A. She ended up in the back door, up the 18 stairs, hiding in a crawlspace for the whole day. 19 Q. Did that appear to you to be a serious 20 breach of security? 21 A. Yes, sir. 22 Q. And based on your experience with Madonna 23 and your other experience in the industry, are 24 celebrity stalkers sometimes dangerous? 25 A. Very. 26 Q. Most of the time not, I take it. 27 A. You can’t -- you never know. I mean, they 28 change. They’re very dangerous at times, though. 9906 1 Q. All right. Now, during the time that you 2 were working for Mr. Jackson, did you have occasion 3 to know the Barnes family? 4 A. Yes, sir. 5 Q. Did you see them with Mr. Jackson? 6 A. Yes, sir. 7 Q. Did you see -- can you tell us about the 8 family that you saw? 9 A. Very nice family. They did a lot of 10 traveling with us. I liked them. 11 Q. Okay. And who were the family members that 12 you remember seeing? 13 A. Brett. Karlee. Mrs. Barnes. And 14 occasionally Mr. Barnes. 15 Q. So the whole family, two parents and -- 16 A. Yes. 17 Q. -- and a son and daughter. 18 Did you have occasion to meet Macaulay 19 Culkin and his family? 20 A. I met Macaulay, but not his family, and that 21 was at a time in Chicago when I was there doing a 22 video with Michael. 23 Q. So you didn’t see Macaulay Culkin or his 24 family at the ranch when you were there? 25 A. No. 26 Q. All right. Do you know Wade Robson and his 27 family? 28 A. Yes. 9907 1 Q. Can you tell us about that family? 2 A. I don’t remember if I ever -- I think they 3 were at the ranch a few times, but I met him more at 4 video shoots that we did. And Wade was dancing and 5 things like that. His mother was Joy. 6 Q. Okay. Did you have occasion to meet Jordie 7 Chandler? 8 A. No. 9 Q. Okay. Did you ever meet his mother? 10 A. No. 11 Q. Did you know Blanca Francia? 12 A. No. 13 Q. She would have been gone before you arrived; 14 is that right? 15 A. Yes, sir. 16 Q. All right. So therefore you didn’t meet 17 Jason Francia either? 18 A. No. 19 Q. With all of those people that you just 20 mentioned, the ones that you met, the Barnes, the 21 Robsons, Culkin, to the extent that you saw him, did 22 you ever see Mr. Jackson ever do anything 23 inappropriate with any of them? 24 A. No, sir. 25 Q. Now, you mentioned Bill Bray, who is a 26 retired L.A. Police Department detective. Did he 27 take an active interest in the security at Neverland 28 Ranch? 9908 1 A. When we first got there, yes. 2 Q. And did he come up from time to time? 3 A. Yes, sir. 4 Q. Did you answer to Mr. Bray during the time 5 that you worked there? 6 A. During the whole time that I worked there? 7 Q. Well, let’s start with from ‘91 to ‘94. 8 A. From ‘91 to ‘94 I did, yes. 9 Q. And then after you became ranch manager, you 10 didn’t report directly to him anymore? 11 A. No. 12 Q. You still knew him? 13 A. Yes. 14 Q. If you had seen anything inappropriate with 15 these children or any law violations, would you have 16 reported them to Mr. Bray? 17 A. Yes, sir. 18 Q. By the way, did Mr. Bray travel on tour from 19 time to time? 20 A. Yes, sir. 21 Q. Now, how many employees were there at the 22 ranch when you were working as ranch manager? 23 A. When I started or when I finished? 24 Q. Give us the range. 25 A. I think there was about 160 when we first 26 went up there, and about 80 in ‘98 when I left. 27 Q. Okay. And did the various department heads 28 report to you? 9909 1 A. Yes, sir. 2 Q. So at that time, you would have been -- you 3 would have had housekeeping, security, fire, zoo, 4 all the others would have reported to you; is that 5 correct? 6 A. Yes, sir. 7 Q. Did you have meetings with them from time to 8 time? 9 A. Yes, sir. 10 Q. And the employees that you described, from 11 160 at the high point down to maybe 80-some at the 12 lower point, were those people who lived in the 13 community here? 14 A. Yes, sir. 15 Q. And how many people were there who came up 16 from, as it were, from the corporate headquarters, 17 who worked there? 18 MR. SNEDDON: I’m going to object as 19 immaterial. 20 THE COURT: Sustained. 21 MR. SANGER: Okay. 22 Q. Did at some point Mr. Abdool, Kassim Abdool, 23 Ralph Chacon and Adrian McManus stopped coming to 24 work? 25 A. Yeah, they just stopped coming to work. 26 Q. Did they all stop on the same day? 27 A. Pretty much. 28 Q. Okay. Did they at some point sue you? 9910 1 A. Yes, sir. 2 Q. And they sued seven other employees; is that 3 right? 4 A. Yes, sir. 5 Q. Sued Bill Bray? 6 A. Yes, sir. 7 Q. Betty Bailey? 8 A. Yes, sir. 9 Q. With the exception of -- let me withdraw 10 that. Melanie Bagnall also joined that lawsuit; is 11 that correct? 12 A. Correct. 13 Q. And she sued Andrew Merritt; is that right? 14 A. Yes, sir. 15 Q. With the exception of Andrew Merritt, were 16 all the people that were sued people from the 17 corporate headquarters, for lack of a better term? 18 A. Yes, sir. 19 Q. And what was the outcome of that lawsuit? 20 A. We won it hands-down. I think it was 12 21 “No” verdicts on all but one. 22 Q. The all but one -- 23 A. Was the Andy Merritt. 24 Q. Melanie Bagnall’s claims against Andy 25 Merritt? 26 A. Yes, sir. 27 Q. Andy Merritt was a security guard? 28 A. Yes, sir. 9911 1 Q. And he won that as well? 2 A. He won that as well, yes. 3 Q. 10 to 3 or something? 4 A. Something like that. 5 MR. SNEDDON: I’m going to object. Asked 6 and answered; move to strike. 7 THE COURT: Overruled. 8 Q. BY MR. SANGER: Okay. Now, with regard to 9 the ‘93 period of time, do you recall in ‘93 whether 10 or not there were certain people who went to the 11 media to sell their stories? 12 A. Yes, sir. 13 Q. Do you recall who some of those people were? 14 A. Yes, sir. 15 Q. Tell us. 16 A. Ralph Chacon, Adrian McManus, and Kassim 17 Abdool, Melanie Bagnall, Sandi Domz. 18 Q. Now, actually, before they went to the 19 media, were there any other employees who had gone 20 to the media? 21 A. I believe there were, but I don’t remember 22 the names. 23 Q. Do you remember if Blanca Francia -- 24 MR. SNEDDON: Your Honor, I’m going to 25 object as leading. 26 THE COURT: Overruled. 27 Q. BY MR. SANGER: Do you remember if Blanca 28 Francia was one of them? 9912 1 A. I remember hearing that, yes, but I didn’t 2 know her. 3 Q. These were people that were before you got 4 there? 5 A. Yes, sir. 6 Q. During the time you were ranch manager -- 7 you said you reported directly to Bill Bray before 8 you were ranch manager? 9 A. Yes. 10 Q. After you were ranch manager, who did you 11 report to? 12 A. Steve Chabrey or Mr. Jackson himself. 13 Q. Who was Steve Chabrey? 14 A. He was the CEO at the time of MJJ 15 Productions. 16 Q. And he had an office down in L.A.? 17 A. Yes. 18 Q. And he would have been Mr. Bray’s boss as 19 well, I suppose. 20 A. I don’t know if they were separate or not, 21 but Mr. Chabrey was overseeing the whole operation 22 at the time. 23 Q. And you said you also reported to Michael 24 Jackson? 25 A. Yes, sir. 26 Q. Now, have you gotten to know Mr. Jackson on 27 a personal basis, personal level? 28 A. Yes, sir. 9913 1 Q. And how did that occur? 2 A. I think over years of, you know, building up 3 the trust, that, you know, Michael felt comfortable 4 with me, and we talked about different things, and I 5 was able to talk to him about things that were going 6 on. 7 Q. All right. And that occurred before you 8 became ranch manager? 9 A. Yes, sir. 10 Q. While you were ranch manager, did you still 11 have the opportunity to talk with Mr. Jackson when 12 he was on the property? 13 A. Yes, sir. 14 Q. Did you talk to him every day? 15 A. No, sir. 16 Q. All right. What was your, let’s say, policy 17 or attitude towards talking with Mr. Jackson? 18 A. I would only talk to him if he would come up 19 to me or if I really needed to ask him something 20 about what was going on. I didn’t make it a point 21 to try to, you know, buddy up with him and get to 22 know him, but I had a job to do. 23 Q. All right. And at the ranch, if there was a 24 policy decision about security, for instance, how 25 would that policy decision generally be made? 26 A. When I was the ranch manager, I would make 27 the ultimate decision on the policy. 28 Q. Did you ask Mr. Jackson? 9914 1 A. No. 2 Q. All right. And who would you consult with 3 when you were ranch manager? 4 A. Sometimes I’d run it through Evvy, who was 5 Michael’s -- that worked for Michael down in L.A. A 6 lot of times, depending on the policies, you know, I 7 made the decision myself. 8 Q. And going the other way in the chain of 9 command, who would you consult with? 10 A. What do you mean, “going the other way”? 11 Q. In other words, would you talk to the head 12 of security, for instance? 13 A. I talked to them, yes, about why we’re doing 14 this and why it needs to be done. 15 Q. With regard to other decisions of that sort, 16 was Mr. Jackson hands-on running things at the 17 ranch, telling people what to do? 18 A. No, sir. 19 Q. Would Mr. Jackson from time to time ask 20 employees for things, for assistance with something, 21 unlock a door -- 22 A. Yes, sir. 23 Q. As far as making these policy decisions on 24 security and that sort of thing -- 25 A. No, he wasn’t involved. 26 Q. All right. And despite the fact you left 27 employment to go down and work in San Diego, do you 28 still consider Mr. Jackson to be a friend? 9915 1 A. Yes, sir. 2 Q. Have you had any contact with him recently? 3 A. Just said hello yesterday. I haven’t seen 4 him since I left, so I did consider him a friend, 5 yes. 6 MR. SANGER: That’s fair enough. 7 Thank you. I have no further questions. 8 THE COURT: Cross-examine. 9 10 CROSS-EXAMINATION 11 BY MR. SNEDDON: 12 Q. Good morning, Mr. Van Norman. 13 A. Good morning, Mr. Sneddon. 14 MR. SNEDDON: Hand me that water, if you 15 would. 16 Q. When you began work for Mr. Jackson 17 originally, you were strictly involved in either 18 providing security on the videos or on a tour, 19 correct? 20 A. Yes, sir. 21 Q. And you did accompany Mr. Jackson on a 22 European tour at one time? 23 A. Yes, sir. 24 Q. And with regard to that particular tour, 25 your responsibilities were security-related on the A 26 team? 27 A. Yes, sir. 28 Q. Were you carrying a weapon at that time? 9916 1 A. No, sir. 2 Q. Did you ever carry a weapon in the 3 protection of Mr. Jackson during any of the tours 4 that you went on with him? 5 A. No, sir. 6 Q. Did you ever carry a weapon during any of 7 the times that you did any video shoots with Mr. 8 Jackson? 9 A. No, sir. 10 Q. Did you ever do any -- did you ever carry a 11 weapon at any of the times when you provided 12 security for Mr. Jackson when he was doing concerts? 13 A. No, sir. 14 Q. The video shoots that you went on with Mr. 15 Jackson were often done in a public setting, 16 correct? 17 A. Yes. Yes, sir. 18 Q. I’m sorry. Go ahead. 19 A. Yes, sir. 20 Q. The reason that you had to interact with the 21 local law enforcement is sometimes they would be 22 done with a lot of fans standing around watching 23 what was going on, correct? 24 A. Yes. 25 Q. And oftentimes in the concerts that you were 26 at, there were thousands and thousands of fans in an 27 open venue -- 28 A. Yes, sir. 9917 1 Q. -- correct? 2 Now, during the time that you said you began 3 your employment on the ranch in December of 1993, 4 okay? Is that correct? 5 A. Yes, sir. 6 Q. Okay. And that you, prior to that, had been 7 on tour with Mr. Jackson? 8 A. Yes, sir. 9 Q. Now, when the allegations surfaced about the 10 Jordan Chandler situation with Mr. Jackson, the tour 11 was aborted, was it not? 12 A. “Aborted” meaning over? 13 Q. Yeah, it was stopped prematurely? 14 A. No, sir. 15 Q. You don’t recall Mr. Jackson being in Mexico 16 for a month or a month and a half? 17 A. Yeah, but when the allegations first came 18 out, we were on tour and we didn’t stop it right 19 then and there. We continued until we got to Mexico 20 City, and then we cancelled a few dates after that. 21 Q. And then you went to England for a while. 22 Did you go with Mr. Jackson to England? 23 A. No, sir. 24 Q. So there were several months where Mr. 25 Jackson was out of the country in either Mexico or 26 England where you weren’t part of his A team at that 27 time? 28 A. He left right from Mexico to England, and it 9918 1 was -- I don’t think it was several months. I think 2 it was six weeks. 3 Q. I won’t quibble with you over a couple 4 weeks, but you weren’t part of the A team providing 5 security at that time? 6 A. I don’t think he had anybody with him at the 7 time. 8 Q. Now, when you got to the ranch, you did 9 carry a weapon, correct? 10 A. Yes, sir. 11 Q. You were armed? 12 A. Yes, sir. 13 Q. And the other OSS officers were also armed? 14 A. Yes, sir. 15 Q. And there were four of them? 16 A. Yes, sir. 17 Q. The names -- Tony Coleman is one I know. 18 A. Tony Coleman. Marcus Johnson. Jerome 19 Johnson. 20 Q. Okay. Now, you know what a guard card is, 21 don’t you? 22 A. Yes, sir. 23 Q. What’s a guard card? 24 A. A guard card is something that a security 25 guard needs to work in the State of California. 26 Q. And during the time that you were providing 27 security for Mr. Jackson at his ranch from December 28 of ‘93 on, you did not have a guard card, correct? 9919 1 A. No, sir. 2 Q. And the weapon that you were carrying on 3 your person during the time you were employed there 4 was a nine-millimeter Glock? 5 A. Yes, sir. 6 Q. And you had another sidearm -- not sidearm, 7 but another weapon, pistol, I guess. It’s a Witness 8 .40 semi-automatic? 9 A. Yes, sir. 10 Q. And you had a stun gun? 11 A. Yes, sir. 12 Q. Now, did you carry your -- the one that you 13 carried on your person most of the time was the 14 nine-millimeter Glock, correct? 15 A. Yes, sir. 16 Q. Did you carry that on your waist? 17 A. Usually on my back. 18 Q. In a -- back here? 19 A. Back -- uh-huh, yes, sir. 20 Q. Let’s go back a little bit and talk about 21 some of the tours you were on. You were in Chicago 22 with Mr. Jackson with the Barnes family, correct? 23 A. Yes, sir. 24 Q. And on all of the tours that you went on, 25 was it your position to be in the room next door to 26 Mr. Jackson’s room? 27 A. I would say 95 percent of the time that’s 28 where my room was. 9920 1 Q. Fair enough. And it was your observation, 2 was it not, that during the time that Brett Barnes 3 was in Chicago, that he stayed with Mr. Jackson in 4 Mr. Jackson’s room, correct? 5 A. I believe so, yes. 6 Q. And it was your observation that during the 7 time that the Barnes family accompanied Mr. Jackson 8 to South America -- were you on that tour? 9 A. Yes, sir. 10 Q. -- (continuing) that Mr. Jackson -- that 11 Brett Barnes spent virtually every night with Mr. 12 Jackson in his bedroom, correct? 13 A. I believe so, yes. 14 Q. And there was a South American tour, 15 correct? 16 A. Yes, sir. 17 Q. And Brett Barnes was on that tour with Mr. 18 Jackson, correct? 19 A. I believe so. 20 Q. And spent every night with Mr. Jackson in 21 his room? 22 A. I believe so. 23 Q. Were you present at the time that Mr. 24 Jackson was about to get on the plane to leave for 25 that tour to South America? Were you in the limo 26 with Mr. Jackson? 27 A. I don’t recall exactly where I was, whether 28 I was in the limo, but I was on the tour, so I was 9921 1 either standing outside the limo or sometimes I 2 drove in the limo with him. 3 Q. Do you recall Brett Barnes being in the limo 4 with Mr. Jackson? 5 A. I don’t remember back then, that far. 6 Q. Do you remember them having to take Mr. 7 Barnes away from Mr. Jackson and hide him away from 8 the people to get on the plane in a separate way? 9 A. No, I don’t. 10 Q. You don’t recall any of that? 11 A. No, I don’t. 12 Q. How old was Brett Barnes about the time that 13 he was traveling with Mr. Jackson, in your opinion? 14 A. About 13. 15 Q. Teenager? 16 A. Yes, sir. 17 Q. You never questioned what a teenager was 18 doing in Mr. Jackson’s bedroom night after night 19 after night? 20 A. No, sir. 21 Q. You didn’t think it was inappropriate for a 22 teenager to be sleeping with a 35-year-old man -- 23 A. No, sir. 24 Q. -- not his relative? 25 A. No, not at the time. 26 Q. While you were -- while you were at the 27 ranch, you did purchase some security equipment in 28 an attempt to upgrade the systems there, right? 9922 1 A. Not really to update the systems. Just to 2 give them a little more security to certain areas, 3 yes. 4 Q. But you did buy some security equipment? 5 A. Yes, I did. 6 Q. And did you ever buy any eavesdropping 7 devices? 8 A. No, sir. 9 Q. Anything that you plugged into the wall so 10 you could listen to people? 11 A. No, sir. 12 Q. When you purchased the equipment that was to 13 upgrade the security system there, would the invoice 14 that you were given correctly describe the items 15 that you bought? 16 A. No, sir. 17 Q. In other words, it was -- it was not 18 correct? 19 A. It was not correct, yes. 20 Q. And what was the reason that the invoice did 21 not accurately depict the things that you actually 22 purchased? 23 A. We didn’t want anybody to know we were 24 purchasing video equipment to go outside of Mr. 25 Jackson’s bedroom so he could have -- he could see 26 who’s coming down the hallway. And we felt it was 27 nobody else’s business what we were doing. So if we 28 depicted it as video equipment and what it was, then 9923 1 it serves no purpose; that people would know that 2 there’s a camera out there. 3 Q. Well, who would be looking for invoices that 4 you’d buy security equipment from? 5 A. People that go through the invoices. The 6 accountants. The people at the ranch that were 7 working in administration. It was none of their 8 business. 9 Q. So you didn’t use that invoice to hide the 10 fact that you bought eavesdropping devices that were 11 inserted into all the walls in the house? 12 A. I didn’t buy any eavesdropping devices, sir. 13 Q. Okay. The ranch phone system. I believe 14 you indicated previously that, to your knowledge, 15 there are three places where one can overhear a 16 telephone call, correct? 17 A. Yes, sir. 18 Q. One is in the administrative office? 19 A. Yes, sir. 20 Q. One is at the guard shack? 21 A. Yes, sir. 22 Q. And the other is in Mr. Jackson’s room? 23 A. Yes, sir. 24 Q. Those are the only three places, to your 25 knowledge, when you worked there that that could be 26 done? 27 A. Yes, sir. 28 Q. Do you recall a situation where you were 9924 1 called out to the ranch involving a disagreement 2 between Mr. Coleman and Mr. Chacon over a person who 3 had come onto the ranch? 4 A. I recall something of that, but I really 5 don’t recall the whole incident. 6 Q. Do you recall there was a couple of 7 foreigners who had mistakenly strayed onto the ranch 8 and were encountered by guards? 9 A. Mistakenly? 10 Q. Yeah. 11 A. Okay. No. I do recall that incident, yes. 12 Q. Well, they thought -- 13 A. It’s coming back to me. 14 Q. Well, they were given permission to go on 15 the neighbor’s ranch, correct? 16 A. I don’t know the whole story, no. I don’t 17 recall it. I recall bits and pieces, but I don’t 18 know why they were on Michael’s ranch to begin with. 19 Q. So you didn’t look into it, as the chief of 20 security, to ascertain whether there was a system 21 failure here? 22 A. I wasn’t the chief of security. 23 Q. You were one of the security guards? 24 A. Right, but I wasn’t handling that issue. It 25 was Mr. Coleman. 26 Q. You actually, as a matter of fact, took 27 reports from the individuals involved, did you not? 28 A. I don’t -- 9925 1 MR. SANGER: This is beyond the scope of 2 direct; and relevance. 3 MR. SNEDDON: That has to do with his range 4 of responsibilities, Your Honor. And it also 5 involves Mr. Chacon. 6 THE COURT: The objection is sustained. 7 Q. BY MR. SNEDDON: Did you not conduct an 8 investigation? 9 A. I don’t remember if I did. I did a lot of 10 stuff at the time, and that actual thing I don’t 11 remember. 12 Q. Do you recall whether the sheriff’s 13 department was called out? 14 MR. SANGER: Objection. Relevance; beyond 15 the scope. 16 THE COURT: Overruled. 17 You may answer. 18 THE WITNESS: Again, I don’t remember the 19 whole situation. They may have been. 20 Q. BY MR. SNEDDON: Do you recall whether or 21 not the people were arrested and prosecuted? 22 A. No, I don’t. 23 Q. All right. Just a couple more questions. 24 One of the things that you did when you came 25 onto the ranch in ‘93 - okay? - was that you began 26 to look at some of the personnel files, correct? 27 A. Yes, sir. 28 Q. And you looked at Mr. Chacon’s file twice, 9926 1 correct? 2 A. I believe so. Back then - it’s a ways 3 back - but I believe that’s what I did state -- 4 Q. Okay. 5 A. -- on another case. 6 Q. And you did look at Mr. Abdool’s file, 7 correct? 8 A. Yes, sir. 9 Q. And one of the other things that you looked 10 at was to compare the gate logs with the time cards 11 to see whether or not any individuals on the ranch 12 were cheating in terms of the number of hours they 13 were working, correct? 14 A. Yes, sir. 15 MR. SANGER: I’m going to object, Your 16 Honor. This is beyond the scope of direct, and 17 relevance, and 352. 18 THE COURT: I’m not sure where you’re going. 19 MR. SNEDDON: It’s credibility, Your Honor. 20 THE COURT: All right. 21 MR. SNEDDON: And I think you’ll see when I 22 ask the next question. 23 THE COURT: All right. Go ahead. Overruled. 24 Q. BY MR. SNEDDON: And with regard to Mr. 25 Chacon, you compared your records with the time 26 cards and they were accurate. They didn’t cheat the 27 ranch, did they? 28 A. No, he didn’t, but other employees did. 9927 1 MR. SNEDDON: Move to strike as 2 nonresponsive. 3 THE COURT: The last part is stricken. 4 Q. BY MR. SNEDDON: And with regard to Mr. 5 Abdool, you checked his time cards with the gate 6 logs and they were honestly filled out, correct? 7 A. Yes, sir. 8 Q. And with regard to Adrian McManus, you also 9 checked hers, and they were honestly filled out, 10 correct? 11 A. Yes, sir. 12 Q. And one of the other responsibilities that 13 you conducted at the ranch was to determine whether 14 or not there were any thefts from the ranch, 15 correct? 16 A. We looked to see if things were missing and 17 things along those lines, yes. 18 Q. Correct. And in that connection when you 19 did that, you determined that Adrian McManus, to 20 your knowledge, had never taken anything from the 21 ranch, correct? 22 A. I don’t remember investigating Adrian to see 23 if she took anything from the ranch at that time. 24 Q. Do you remember your deposition being taken 25 in your lawsuit and being asked that question? 26 A. No, I don’t remember right now. Sorry. 27 Q. All right. Do you remember the same 28 question being asked as to Mr. Chacon, that you 9928 1 had -- 2 MR. SANGER: Well -- I’m sorry, Your Honor. 3 If he doesn’t remember the question, how can he 4 remember the same question? So I object. 5 MR. SNEDDON: Maybe he just doesn’t remember 6 that individual. 7 THE COURT: Just stop talking to each other. 8 The objection’s overruled. You may ask that 9 question. I’m not sure you got it all out. 10 MR. SNEDDON: I’ll start over again, Your 11 Honor. 12 Q. The question is, with regard to -- I think 13 we’re on Mr. Chacon at this point, if I’m not 14 mistaken; that you never saw Mr. Chacon take 15 anything from the ranch, correct? 16 A. I never saw him take anything, no. 17 Q. And with regard to Kassim Abdool, you never 18 saw him take anything from the ranch? 19 A. I never saw him take anything, no. 20 Q. And with regard to Miss McManus, you never 21 saw her take anything from the ranch? 22 A. No, I never saw her take anything. 23 MR. SNEDDON: No further questions. 24 Oh, wait. I’m sorry. I do apologize. One 25 area. This won’t take long. 26 Q. Also one of your responsibilities was that, 27 after you came there in December of ‘93, the locks 28 on Mr. Jackson’s -- the entrance door to Mr. 9929 1 Jackson’s room were changed, correct? 2 A. Yes, sir. 3 Q. And you were one of the people who was given 4 the directive to take care of that? 5 A. Yes, sir. 6 Q. And as a matter of fact, it was changed on a 7 couple of occasions due to some communication issues? 8 A. Yes, sir. 9 Q. And Mr. Jackson was not present on the ranch 10 at that time, correct? 11 A. No, he was not. 12 Q. And the orders were given that no one was to 13 go into his room in his absence, correct? 14 A. I believe so. 15 Q. And the locks that were changed are locks 16 that lock on the inside of the door, correct? 17 A. Lock on the inside? 18 Q. Yeah, that the lock’s on the inside? 19 A. Deadbolt on the inside? 20 Q. Right. 21 A. I believe so, but I don’t remember offhand. 22 MR. SNEDDON: Okay. All right. Thank you. 23 I’m sorry. 24 THE COURT: All right. Redirect. 25 MR. SANGER: Yes. Thank you. 26 // 27 // 28 // 9930 1 REDIRECT EXAMINATION 2 BY MR. SANGER: 3 Q. Let’s go to the question area about carrying 4 weapons. 5 First of all, did you, in the course of your 6 employment with Mr. Jackson at the ranch, ever carry 7 a concealed weapon off of his private property? 8 A. No, sir. 9 Q. So if you went into Los Olivos or someplace 10 else, you would not carry a concealed weapon; is 11 that correct? 12 A. Correct. 13 Q. Did you understand that you needed a guard 14 card to carry a concealed weapon on Mr. Jackson’s 15 private property, at his home? 16 A. I don’t believe that I did need a guard card 17 at the time. 18 Q. You did have training in firearms, right? 19 A. Years ago, yes. 20 Q. Did you have any licenses in any 21 jurisdictions to carry a weapon? 22 A. No, sir. 23 Q. So when you were in other jurisdictions, did 24 you ever carry a concealed weapon? 25 A. No, sir. We usually hired off-duty police 26 officers to work with us. 27 Q. All right. 28 MR. SNEDDON: Move to strike the last part 9931 1 as nonresponsive, Your Honor. 2 THE COURT: Stricken. 3 Q. BY MR. SANGER: All right. I was going to 4 get back to this. You worked with actual on-duty 5 law enforcement in various venues; is that correct? 6 A. Yes, sir. 7 Q. And did you hire people who were authorized 8 to carry weapons in other jurisdictions? 9 A. Sometimes, yes. 10 Q. Did Mr. Jackson like to have people have 11 firearms around him? 12 A. No, sir. 13 MR. SNEDDON: I’m going to object. Call for 14 speculation, conclusion, lack of foundation. 15 MR. SANGER: Let me withdraw it and phrase 16 it in a different way, if I may. 17 Q. Did Mr. Jackson ever express to you whether 18 or not he wanted people to have people carrying 19 firearms around him? 20 MR. SNEDDON: Object. Hearsay. 21 THE COURT: Overruled. You may answer. 22 THE WITNESS: I don’t think he liked to have 23 guns around him, no. 24 Q. BY MR. SANGER: All right. In 1993 when you 25 came to the ranch, and you’ve already described the 26 situation with the media and fans and all that -- 27 well, let me withdraw it and put it directly this 28 way: Why did you feel it was necessary to carry a 9932 1 concealed firearm while you were on the ranch 2 property? 3 A. Well, if I can go back to when I worked with 4 Madonna also, they -- these fans can be very 5 dangerous and sometimes they are armed. And there’s 6 been occasions where I’ve had fans that were armed 7 that I’ve taken a gun away from, or a knife, and 8 it’s just for our protection, as well as, you know, 9 I’m not going to go in there blind and get myself 10 hurt. 11 Q. Now, at the ranch, was there a sheriff’s 12 station, you know, within, say, a mile or two of the 13 front gate? 14 A. No, sir. 15 Q. And from time to time, did you actually go 16 out and patrol areas away from the house? 17 A. Do you mean -- oh, yeah, definitely, out in 18 the woods and stuff like that, and we’ve caught fans 19 out there. 20 Q. And how would you go out into the wooded 21 area? 22 A. Usually in a truck. Occasionally on 23 horseback. 24 Q. All right. Did you ever have to use -- did 25 any of you ever have to use your weapons in any way? 26 A. No, sir. 27 Q. All right. There was a question about -- 28 well, let me ask you this: When people travel with 9933 1 Michael Jackson, would it be the responsibility of 2 the personal security staff to also protect those 3 people? 4 A. Yes, sir. 5 Q. And would fans or other people have interest 6 in people who travel with Michael Jackson simply 7 because they were doing so? 8 A. Yes, sir. 9 Q. So somebody might not be famous, but if 10 they’re with Michael Jackson, they’re -- 11 A. They’re in the line of fire, so to speak. 12 There’s instances where we were overtaken sometimes 13 and we would have to get everybody out, so -- 14 Q. You were asked about children being with Mr. 15 Jackson on tour and elsewhere. What was Mr. 16 Jackson’s attitude towards the children that you saw 17 him with? 18 A. His “attitude” meaning -- 19 Q. What’s his demeanor? How did he behave with 20 children? 21 MR. SNEDDON: I’ll object to the foundation. 22 THE COURT: Sustained. 23 Q. BY MR. SANGER: I’m asking about your 24 personal observation of Mr. Jackson hanging out with 25 children. First of all, did you see Mr. Jackson 26 hanging out with children from time to time? 27 A. Yes, sir. 28 Q. And what was your observation about his 9934 1 demeanor, his interrelation with these children? 2 A. He was like one of the kids. I mean, they’d 3 have water balloon fights, pillow fights, food 4 fights. It was a debacle. Just a lot of things 5 that kids do. 6 Q. All right. And did this occur on tour? 7 A. Occasionally, yes. 8 Q. Did it occur at his home at Neverland? 9 A. Most of the time. 10 Q. Did Mr. Jackson also -- well, did you see 11 him with adults? 12 A. Yes sir. 13 Q. How did he interact with adults? 14 A. He’d interact. I mean, he was more shy 15 around adults than he was with the kids. That’s how 16 I saw him, you know, with the adults. He related 17 more with the children. 18 Q. Okay. There was a question about whether or 19 not you called the sheriff or somebody called the 20 sheriff with regard to an intruder. Let me ask you 21 about the policy of the security department at the 22 ranch. Was there a policy with regard to security 23 officers arresting people? 24 A. I don’t remember the policy right off the 25 top of my head. 26 Q. Well, let’s make it simple. 27 A. They’d handcuff them. You know, they’d 28 handcuff them, and I believe then they would call 9935 1 the sheriffs, and the sheriffs would come and take 2 them away. 3 Q. Security didn’t put people in their car or 4 truck and drive them down to a sheriff’s station? 5 A. No, sir. 6 Q. So it would be routine policy to call the 7 sheriffs if you had an intruder; is that right? 8 A. Yes, sir. 9 Q. You were asked about, when you first came to 10 the ranch, checking to see if there were people 11 cheating on the payroll. 12 A. Yes, sir. 13 Q. And one of the things you did, apparently, 14 was to check their time cards against the gate logs; 15 is that right? 16 A. Yes, sir. 17 Q. Now, at that time you didn’t find a 18 discrepancy with regard to Mr. Abdool or Mr. Chacon; 19 is that right? 20 A. That’s correct. 21 Q. And you were asked about initially looking 22 into theft from the ranch; is that correct? 23 A. Yes, sir. 24 Q. During your initial investigations into 25 people cheating, were there other people who you 26 investigated besides Abdool and Chacon? 27 A. Yes, sir. 28 Q. Who? 9936 1 A. Pretty much everybody that worked at the 2 ranch. 3 Q. All right. And did you find some people 4 cheating? 5 A. Yes, sir. 6 Q. And was that part of your job, to try to 7 make sure the ship was being run properly? 8 A. Yes, sir. 9 Q. All right. Did you determine if anybody 10 else had stolen from the ranch? 11 A. Determined by -- I mean, we found out later 12 on that there were things that were taken that were 13 Mr. Jackson’s personal effects. 14 Q. Okay. Before we get to that, in that 15 initial investigation when you were looking to see 16 if people had stolen -- 17 A. Oh, yes, now I recall. We had people that 18 stold stereos out of golf carts, things like that. 19 We came across that and different things, and we did 20 find that there were other things that were stolen. 21 Q. Now, were most of the people that worked at 22 the ranch honest, hard-working people? 23 A. Most of them were, yes. 24 Q. So you found some that weren’t? 25 A. Yes, sir. 26 Q. Now, with regard to Miss McManus and Mr. 27 Chacon, did you later develop evidence that they had 28 stolen from the ranch? 9937 1 A. Yes, sir. 2 MR. SNEDDON: I’m going to object. Lack of 3 personal knowledge and foundation and vague as to 4 what time. 5 THE COURT: Foundation. Sustained. 6 Q. BY MR. SANGER: Okay. After Mr. Chacon and 7 Ms. McManus left the ranch, did you determine 8 whether or not they had stolen from the ranch? 9 A. Yes, sir. 10 MR. SNEDDON: Same objection, Your Honor. 11 Lack of foundation; personal knowledge. 12 THE COURT: Sustained. 13 Q. BY MR. SANGER: Were you present every day 14 of the trial where you were being sued by these 15 people? 16 A. All six months, yes. 17 Q. And did you see witnesses come and swear 18 under oath that these people had stolen from the 19 ranch? 20 MR. SNEDDON: Your Honor, I’m going to 21 object. That’s a highly improper question, and it’s 22 hearsay. 23 THE COURT: Sustained. 24 Q. BY MR. SANGER: At the time Mr. Sneddon 25 asked you about something that was said in the 26 deposition, do you remember when that deposition was 27 taken? 28 A. Not exactly, no. 9938 1 Q. But it was sometime well before the trial; 2 is that correct? 3 A. Yes, sir. 4 Q. Was there other investigation done between 5 the time of your deposition and the trial? 6 A. Yes, sir. 7 Q. Was it done by people other than you -- 8 A. Yes, sir. 9 Q. -- that were licensed private investigators? 10 A. Yes, sir. 11 Q. Or at least one? 12 A. Yes. 13 Q. So at the time of your deposition, you 14 didn’t have any personal knowledge of these people 15 stealing from the ranch; is that correct? 16 A. Correct. 17 Q. And from your point of view at the time of 18 that deposition, that was your personal frame of 19 mind; is that correct? 20 A. That’s correct. 21 Q. And that changed? 22 A. Yes, sir. 23 MR. SNEDDON: Objection, Your Honor. That 24 calls for hearsay and conclusion; no personal 25 knowledge. 26 THE COURT: Overruled. The answer was, “Yes, 27 sir.” 28 MR. SANGER: All right. 9939 1 Okay. I have no further questions. 2 MR. SNEDDON: No questions. 3 THE COURT: All right. Thank you. You may 4 step down. 5 THE WITNESS: Thank you. 6 THE COURT: Call your next witness. 7 MR. SANGER: Your Honor, it would be our 8 intention to play the tapes in the 5000 series. I 9 forgot the exact number, but I’ll get it here in 10 just a moment. 11 MR. ZONEN: I didn’t hear counsel. I’m 12 sorry. 13 MR. SANGER: Oh, is that on? 14 THE COURT: He’s going to play the outtake 15 tape. 16 MR. ZONEN: Was the Court anticipating that 17 there would be some discussion as to what outtake 18 tape would be played? 19 THE COURT: It’s easy for you to say. 20 MR. ZONEN: At one time. 21 THE COURT: No, I wasn’t. 22 MR. ZONEN: We would object to it being 23 played in its entirety, as the content is not 24 entirely relevant to the proceeding. And I think 25 there should be some hearing on it, because I 26 believe we’re talking about hours of tapes. 27 THE COURT: Two hours. 28 MR. SANGER: We had a discussion with Mr. 9940 1 Sneddon. I thought it was resolved. I may be 2 wrong, but -- 3 THE COURT: Two hours and -- they can’t hear 4 you in the back. Two hours and how long? Tell us. 5 MR. SANGER: I think it’s two hours and 45 6 minutes, but I’m not positive as I stand here. I 7 can look at my notes. 8 MR. ZONEN: I would like to be heard as to 9 the content -- 10 THE COURT: All right. I -- 11 MR. ZONEN: -- at this time. 12 THE COURT: I’ll excuse the jury for a couple 13 minutes. We’ll call you back in quickly. 14 15 (The following proceedings were held in 16 open court outside the presence and hearing of the 17 jury:) 18 19 THE COURT: All right. Counsel, do you want 20 to be heard? 21 MR. ZONEN: To begin with, of course, the 22 film “Living with Michael Jackson” was introduced 23 for nonhearsay purposes, with the exception of small 24 segments that dealt with actual admissions by the 25 defendant to the extent that he sleeps with children 26 and his relationship with the Arvizo children. The 27 balance of it was for purposes of showing the 28 response, the public response, to the damage to his 9941 1 career and for purposes of explaining the reaction 2 by Mr. Jackson and his employees to that production. 3 There was some discussion thereafter, but 4 never one that was briefed. We still to this day do 5 not have a written brief from the defense asking the 6 Court’s permission to do this and explaining in 7 writing the justification for doing it and giving 8 clarity to the Court as to exactly which sections of 9 the outtakes they want to show and for what 10 purposes. 11 I viewed the outtakes on a few occasions. 12 There are -- parts of the outtakes show films of 13 Michael Jackson interacting with children on 14 Neverland Ranch. There are films of Michael Jackson 15 in the theater with children. There’s a film of 16 Michael Jackson showing a film. The film is on the 17 film, a film that’s a promotional film of Michael 18 Jackson being shown to children in the theater. 19 There’s films of children walking around Neverland 20 Ranch. None of these, I believe, are relevant to 21 any issue that’s properly before the Court. 22 There are, of course, clips of Debbie Rowe. 23 There are clips of Mr. Jackson’s father. There’s a 24 dialogue that deals with the question of whether or 25 not Mr. Jackson’s father was at any time abusive to 26 the defendant. We don’t believe that any of those 27 interviews deal with issues that are properly before 28 the Court at this time. 9942 1 We believe that to the extent there’s been 2 any discussion as to what would be relevant, we 3 think what would be relevant would be any film that 4 corrects the presentation that may have been 5 misleading in Mr. Bashir’s interview. In other 6 words, if there are outtakes that show the dialogue 7 was taken out of context and that in fact the 8 outtakes, the Hamid outtakes, would place that 9 dialogue in an entirely different light and would 10 correct it, then we believe that certainly would be 11 appropriate to show to this jury. 12 We don’t believe that there’s been any 13 presentation by the defense to that extent. We 14 don’t believe that they have come forward and said 15 that anything so far that appears in the Hamid 16 Moslehi outtakes would in fact clarify any 17 statements made by the defendant. And nor has there 18 been anything in writing or any argument that any 19 other aspect of the outtakes, the Moslehi outtakes, 20 would actually clarify any aspect of the “Living 21 with Michael Jackson” documentary. 22 So our objection would be, first of all, 23 that it be limited only to areas that specifically 24 clarify what is believed to be misleading 25 information in the Martin Bashir documentary, and 26 that that be brought to the Court’s attention in 27 advance so that we know exactly which parts are 28 being shown and that we have an opportunity to 9943 1 review it in advance of it being shown as well. 2 As to the other part, the pictures of 3 children running around, it’s collateral. It’s 4 immaterial. It’s irrelevant to any issue that’s 5 currently before the Court. 6 To the extent that there are statements by 7 the defendant in there, again we believe that 8 statements by the defendant would constitute 9 hearsay, it being introduced for the truth of the 10 matter stated, except to the extent that those 11 statements are part of the interviews that were 12 presented in the Martin Bashir and for which they 13 clarify the actual statements that were made by the 14 defendant. Any other statements that are unrelated 15 to what was shown on Martin Bashir we believe would 16 be hearsay by the defendant. 17 Submit it. 18 MR. SANGER: I think Mr. Zonen is wrong. 19 And I usually don’t say that about a legal argument, 20 a legal argument Mr. Zonen’s making, but I think 21 he’s just wrong here factually. 22 We’re talking about the outtakes, the Hamid 23 Moslehi outtakes. We’re not talking about the Maury 24 Povich show. The Maury Povich included Debbie Rowe 25 material. The outtakes do not. Unless there’s -- 26 THE COURT: I agree with you. I’ve watched 27 the outtakes. 28 MR. SANGER: All right. And there was also 9944 1 some other references to content that I think are in 2 the Maury Povich production as opposed to this 3 thing. So that’s number one. 4 Number two, procedurally, I think the Court 5 recalls I raised this with Mr. Sneddon in chambers, 6 and then we came out, and there was a point where I 7 was at the bench with Mr. Auchincloss, and Your 8 Honor indicated that we could play it. 9 I was prepared to submit a brief. I mean, 10 we actually started doing something on that, and 11 then when Your Honor said we could play it today, I 12 instructed my associate lawyer, Mr. Dunkle, to stop 13 working on that and to do something else. So we 14 could have briefed it. However, we did brief this 15 early on in the case and we filed a brief. I just 16 don’t have it with me, because I didn’t anticipate 17 this argument. 18 THE COURT: No, it had been briefed early on. 19 MR. SANGER: Yes. 20 THE COURT: And I had ruled that it wasn’t 21 admissible in the People’s case. 22 MR. SANGER: Right. I’m sorry. 23 THE COURT: The problem with the outtakes is 24 that it’s so long, because it includes a lot of 25 material that’s not outtakes. I mean, I guess 26 however you define “outtakes.” But it includes a 27 lot of material that was in the original picture, 28 because he’s taking original video. He’s taking 9945 1 that as the other person is taking it. 2 But I am going to allow the playing of the 3 entire tape, except I may have forgotten -- it’s 4 some time since I watched it. If some material, 5 such as the district attorney’s alluded to, is on 6 this tape that I don’t recall, then you can object 7 during the tape and I’ll put the “Black Screen” up 8 and we’ll deal with it. 9 I think what it is, though, is just a lot of 10 what we’ve already seen, plus a little additional 11 material. And it’s -- it’s all sort of tied in 12 together. 13 MR. SANGER: And just to -- because the 14 jury’s not here, so I can say it in advance in case 15 it comes up that there’s a contemporaneous 16 objection, we’re submitting this not only as the 17 context under the Evidence Code for the statements 18 that had been offered as admissions, and those 19 statements, while brief, there were a couple, three 20 pages of statements, they’re rather comprehensive 21 about Mr. Jackson’s attitude and everything else. 22 So the entire film puts that in context. 23 In addition to that, the Hamid outtakes are 24 important because the People introduced Bashir to 25 start with, besides for the truth of the matter of 26 some statements, they introduced it to show the 27 state of mind of everybody. 28 Well, the outtakes, as we already have 9946 1 evidence, were made known and were provided to Maury 2 Povich before the 20th, so the state of mind of 3 everybody was we had some pretty powerful material. 4 THE COURT: I’m letting that in. 5 MR. SANGER: Yes. 6 THE COURT: What I would keep out is -- I 7 have the same recollection you do. I think that the 8 material that he was referring to is on a different 9 tape; it doesn’t involve this one. But -- 10 MR. SANGER: That’s correct. 11 THE COURT: -- I’m just telling him it has 12 nothing to do with Mr. Jackson’s statements. That’s 13 not what I included. It has to do with scenes with 14 children and that sort of thing, an interview with 15 the father, things he’s alluded to, the interview 16 with the ex-wife, that thing. I don’t think that’s 17 on this, but if it is, alert me and I’ll stop. But 18 the rest of it, it’s going to come in under the 19 authorities that you had previously cited just now. 20 MR. SANGER: Thank you, Your Honor. 21 THE COURT: Let’s have the jury come back. 22 We’ll get 15 minutes in before our break. 23 MR. ZONEN: Your Honor, will there be an 24 instruction to the jury with regards to the 25 statements of the defendant not being admitted for 26 the truth of the matter stated, except to the extent 27 that they are inconsistent with statements that 28 perhaps came in for the truth of the matter stated 9947 1 in the Povich film -- or, excuse me, the Bashir 2 film? 3 MR. SANGER: That wouldn’t be the law. The 4 entire statement can come in if part of it is 5 admitted. 6 THE COURT: Yeah, I’m not going to give them 7 any further warning at this time. 8 MR. SANGER: Before you call -- I just want 9 to make sure this works. 10 Your Honor, before you call them in - for 11 some reason our side seems to be jinxed - can I just 12 make sure it works? 13 THE COURT: Yes. That would be a good thing 14 to do. 15 MR. SANGER: I’m going to push all the 16 buttons here, and I don’t want to do anything with 17 that one. 18 THE BAILIFF: Are you doing it on the DVD? 19 MR. SANGER: Yes, I certainly hope so. 20 THE BAILIFF: Could you try “Input 4,” 21 Judge? 22 MR. SANGER: And that just reminds me what I 23 was going to do. 24 THE BAILIFF: Bring the jury in? 25 THE COURT: He wants to say something. Just 26 a moment. 27 MR. SANGER: This is in the reverse order. 28 So what I propose to do there, they’re numbered as 9948 1 5009-A, B and C, which corresponds to the order the 2 sheriff marked them, as 10, 11 and 12. But I 3 believe that 11 and 12 come before 10 4 chronologically, so I’d just like to play it in that 5 order, if I could. So it would be B, C and then A. 6 THE COURT: You can play it in whatever order 7 you want to. 8 All right. Bring in the jury. 9 MR. SANGER: Could we approach just to be 10 clear on something? Or Mr. Auchincloss come up, 11 too? 12 MR. AUCHINCLOSS: Yeah. 13 MR. ZONEN: Me too? 14 (Discussion held off the record at sidebar.) 15 16 (The following proceedings were held in 17 open court in the presence and hearing of the 18 jury:) 19 20 THE COURT: (To the jury) Mr. Sanger is 21 going to tell you what the tape is that you are 22 about to watch. 23 MR. SANGER: Thank you, Your Honor. 24 First of all, the exhibit is No. 5009-A, B 25 and C, and we intend to play it in the order of B, 26 C, A. These are videos that were seized by the 27 sheriff’s department. Mr. Moslehi has testified 28 that he had taken videos while Mr. Bashir was 9949 1 interviewing Mr. Jackson. And these -- it was 2 agreed that we would not have to call him back to 3 authenticate these documents, or these videos. 4 THE COURT: All right. That’s fine. You may 5 start. 6 MR. SANGER: Thank you. 7 I’ll put in 5009-B. 8 (Whereupon, a portion of a DVD, Defendant’s 9 Exhibit 5009-B, was played for the Court and jury.) 10 THE COURT: Why don’t we stop. 11 MR. SANGER: Your Honor, I stopped it at 12 7:20, in case it gets lost. 13 MR. SANGER: Okay. 14 (Recess taken.) 15 THE COURT: All right. Go ahead. 16 MR. SANGER: We’ll resume with 5009-B, if we 17 may. 18 (Whereupon, a portion of a DVD, Defendant’s 19 Exhibit 5009-B, was played for the Court and jury.) 20 MR. SANGER: That’s the end of that disk. 21 And we’ll put the next one in, with the Court’s 22 permission. 23 THE COURT: Go right ahead. 24 MR. SANGER: For the record, this is 5009-C. 25 (Whereupon, a DVD, Defendant’s Exhibit 26 5009-C, was played for the Court and jury.) 27 THE COURT: We’ll go ahead and take the 28 recess now while you set up the next tape. 9950 1 (Recess taken.) 2 MR. SANGER: Yes, Your Honor. The clerk 3 reminded me that we had not formally moved 5009-A, B 4 and C into evidence. I think it was implicit in the 5 Court’s ruling, but I want to officially do it on 6 the record, if you may 7 THE COURT: You may. 8 MR. SANGER: Thank you. 9 And we now have 5009-A which I will start, 10 and it’s Sheriff’s 913-C. 11 (Whereupon, a portion of a DVD, Defendant’s 12 Exhibit 5009-A, was played for the Court and jury.) 13 MR. SANGER: Your Honor, I think there’s 14 about four minutes left, but I could be wrong. 15 THE COURT: There’s no time left. 16 MR. SANGER: There’s no time left. That’s 17 fine. 18 THE COURT: See you tomorrow at 8:30. 19 A JUROR: Thank you. 20 (The proceedings adjourned at 2:30 p.m.) 21 --o0o-- 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 9951 1 REPORTER’S CERTIFICATE 2 3 4 THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE ) 5 OF CALIFORNIA, ) 6 Plaintiff, ) 7 -vs- ) No. 1133603 8 MICHAEL JOE JACKSON, ) 9 Defendant. ) 10 11 12 I, MICHELE MATTSON McNEIL, RPR, CRR, 13 CSR #3304, Official Court Reporter, do hereby 14 certify: 15 That the foregoing pages 9886 through 9951 16 contain a true and correct transcript of the 17 proceedings had in the within and above-entitled 18 matter as by me taken down in shorthand writing at 19 said proceedings on May 11, 2005, and thereafter 20 reduced to typewriting by computer-aided 21 transcription under my direction. 22 DATED: Santa Maria, California, 23 May 11, 2005. 24 25 26 27 MICHELE MATTSON McNEIL, RPR, CRR, CSR #3304 28 9952